Some kids get a bunny for Easter. Yours gets three, rendered in moody oil-style brushwork across a set of prints that look like they belong in a countryside manor, not a big box store.
This bunny wall art follows a hare through three quiet moments: crouched at the edge of a rocky stream, tucked into the hollow of a gnarled old tree surrounded by wild mushrooms and meadow flowers, and finally a tiny silhouette mid-leap across an open moorland under a grey sky. The palette is all warm browns, soft greys, and muted greens. Earthy, grounded, and genuinely interesting to look at.
Together, the three prints read like a story unfolding across the wall. It's the kind of woodland hare nature art that a child can grow into, where a toddler sees a bunny and a ten-year-old starts noticing the texture of the bark. It works beautifully in a nursery, a kids' bedroom, or a reading nook that deserves something with a little more soul than a cartoon forest.
This is cottagecore wildlife art that doesn't feel like a trend. It feels like something you'd find in a grandmother's house and immediately want to take home.