Tapet Round Table in white
Similar products
Description
Wallpaper Round Table in white
The Round Table (White) wallpaper pattern from the Britannia Unchained collection is a pared-down, diaphanous and symbolically elevated version of the chivalric motif, in which the idea of authority is reinterpreted through the prism of purity, balance and light. If the Red and Black versions express solemnity and visual power through chromatic saturation, this version explores nobility from the perspective of discretion and compositional balance taken to its essence.
The geometric structure retains the essence of the basic model: perfectly contoured circles with stylised radial motifs inspired by the legendary round table and Gothic stained-glass windows. Each ornamental module maintains an orderly, mathematical rhythm, but in this luminous interpretation, the entire composition seems suspended in an ethereal, white space where repetition takes on an almost ritualistic meaning. It is more than decoration - it is a symbolic organisation of silence and inner balance.
The colour palette revolves around white in various shades: pearly white, matt ivory, pearly cream and subtle shades of light grey, which delicately outline the contours of the motifs. These colours are reminiscent of the pale decorations of British neoclassical interiors, but also of the blank pages of a nobleman's book, the parchments preserved in archives or the fine textiles of royal bedchambers. Light plays a key role in the perception of this wallpaper - depending on the angle and source of light, the pattern appears and disappears, like invisible writing that only surfaces at certain moments.
Round Table (White) is an exercise in extreme refinement, a form of calm and quiet authority that expresses itself not through force but through the absolute control of simplicity. It is a wallpaper that does not impose an atmosphere, but provides it - an atmosphere of clarity, visual cleanliness and nobility in its subtlest form. In this version, the legend of the knights becomes less a story about battle and more an aesthetic ideal of harmony, clarity and inner nobility.