From $179
Ten through ace, the five panels in this ocean poker set each carry a hand drawn heart card, with reef royalty and undersea life worked into the pip design on every panel. Lined up together they read as one wide reef scene rather than five separate cards.
The set is built for a wall with room to spread out, a game room, home bar, or man cave where you can run the panels in one long row or split the layout across two shelves. It starts at 5x 8x10 and scales up to 5x 40x60, priced from $179.
Checkout, shipping, and returns are handled by WallCanvasArt.
Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in five sizes per orientation, from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5 to 10 business days.
Each panel in this set follows the same hand drawn line style, but the reef detail changes card to card: a mermaid curls around one pip, a sea god anchors another, so the set holds together as a group without any single panel repeating the last. That consistency is what makes this ocean theme poker canvas set read as one piece even when it's split across five frames.
If you're planning the full wall rather than just this set, our game room setup guide covers spacing and layout for multi panel prints like this one. It also sits well next to other five panel game room wall art if you want to build out a bigger poker themed wall over time.
Yes. While a single horizontal row is the most common layout, the set also works stacked two over three if your wall is taller than it is wide. Each panel is a standalone heart card from ten through ace, so the order can shift as long as the sequence still reads left to right or top to bottom.
Each of the five cards, ten through ace, carries its own reef themed detail, including mermaids and a sea god worked into the pip design, so the imagery changes panel to panel rather than repeating. That variation is part of what keeps the set interesting across all five pieces instead of feeling like one image split into sections.