One Subject, Every Style
The designs here share a subject and almost nothing else. The same female figure can appear as a detailed realistic portrait, a single continuous line, or a block of flat pop art color — and each treatment suits a different room and a different painter.
Three lanes dominate the collection:
- Floral portraits: blooms woven into the hair, flower crowns, and petals framing the face — the style this category is best known for.
- Fashion and line art: minimalist sketches, wide-brim hats, silhouettes, and pop art faces in bold color blocks.
- Soft decorative figures: flowing dresses, art nouveau-inspired curves, and dreamlike compositions built around the figure.
Because the subject never changes, browsing works differently here than in animal or city collections: you aren't hunting for the right motif, you're matching a mood and a palette to the room the canvas will hang in.
Two neighboring lanes have homes of their own: the fullest range of dancers and stage scenes lives in the ballet paint by number collection, while designs where the hairstyle itself carries the artwork gather under hair paint by numbers.
Where the Difficulty Hides
In figure art, difficulty concentrates in one place: the face. Realistic features mean tight clusters of small numbered sections around the eyes, lips, and skin transitions, and those areas ask for a fine brush and a slower pace.
When you do take on a realistic face, work from the largest skin areas toward the smallest details and let each section dry before painting its neighbor — rushing wet edges is the fastest way to muddy a portrait.
Stylized designs route around that challenge. Silhouettes, turned heads, closed eyes, and single-line figures swap facial detail for long outlines and generous shapes, which is why much of this collection sits comfortably at beginner level. And if what you actually want is a recognizable likeness rather than an anonymous figure, a custom kit made from your own photo handles that instead.
Display Options for the Finished Canvas
Feminine wall art usually has a destination before the first paint pot opens — a bedroom wall, the space above a vanity, or a studio corner. Deciding that spot early helps, because it settles both the placement and the variant question.
The No Frame option arrives as a rolled canvas to stretch or frame after you finish. Pre-stretched on Frame comes mounted on wooden bars, so the piece can move straight to the wall once the last section dries. At 16x20 inches (40x50 cm), pre-made canvases hold their own above a dresser or makeup table without overwhelming the room.
A Gift That Doubles as Decor
They work well as gifts because the finished piece can match her decor, whether she chooses the design herself or you pick one based on her style. A minimalist line figure suits a friend furnishing a first apartment; a floral portrait fits a mother who collects botanical prints. The subject stays constant, so the style does the personalizing, and the project itself becomes part of the present.