I moved into my flat two years ago and immediately told myself I'd sort the walls out properly. I'd find the right prints, frame them well, make the place feel considered and intentional. Two years later, the walls were still completely bare. Not minimalist — just empty. The kind of empty that makes a flat feel like somewhere you're staying temporarily rather than somewhere you actually live.
The problem was that every time I looked for wall art, I either found things that felt too generic, too expensive to commit to, or too serious for a flat that is, fundamentally, the home of a thirty-one-year-old who owns too many houseplants and has a dedicated shelf for instant noodle varieties. Nothing felt like me.
And then I found a frog eating ramen.
Why I Decided I Needed It
I was looking for something for the kitchen wall — a small space above the counter that had been blank since I moved in and that I'd been meaning to address for approximately twenty-three months. I wanted something with personality. Something that would make people smile when they walked in. Something that didn't take itself too seriously.
The Retro Japanese Frog Ramen Poster by DArtano appeared in my search results and I stopped scrolling immediately. A frog, rendered in a warm vintage Japanese illustration style, sitting contentedly over a bowl of ramen. It is, objectively, a perfect image. It is also exactly the kind of thing that tells you something true about the person who chose to put it on their wall.
At £7.99, the decision took approximately four seconds. I ordered it from ALTOE that evening.
Why This One Specifically
There's a lot of Japanese-aesthetic wall art out there, and a lot of it leans heavily on the same handful of references — wave prints, cherry blossoms, the usual. The Frog Ramen poster is doing something different. It has the warmth and craft of vintage Japanese commercial illustration — the kind you'd find on an old food packaging label or a retro restaurant menu — but with a subject matter that's quietly absurd and completely charming.
The frog is not ironic. The frog is sincere. That's what makes it work.
The print quality is also genuinely good for the price. The colours are rich and consistent, the lines are crisp, and it holds up well when you look at it closely rather than just from across the room. I framed mine in a simple black frame from a charity shop and it looks like something I paid considerably more for.
What Happened When I Put It Up
I put it up on a Saturday morning. By Saturday afternoon, three different people had commented on it. My friend Anya, who has impeccable taste and is not easily impressed, said it was “actually brilliant.” My neighbour, who came round to return a parcel, asked where I'd got it. My mum, on a video call, spotted it in the background and made me hold the phone up so she could see it properly.
It has since become the most-commented-on thing in my flat, which is saying something given that I also own a six-foot monstera and a vintage record player. The frog wins every time.
How It Changed Things
This sounds like a lot to attribute to a poster, but: putting up the frog broke the spell. Once there was something on one wall, the blankness of the others became intolerable. I've since put up four more prints — nothing as good as the frog, but all chosen with more confidence than I'd managed in the previous two years. The flat finally feels like somewhere I chose to live rather than somewhere I ended up.
The frog is still the best one. It's the anchor. Everything else is arranged in relation to it.
For £7.99, it is the best money I have spent on this flat. And I bought a very good sofa.
Get the Retro Japanese Frog Ramen Poster here: Retro Japanese Frog Ramen Poster – Cute Vintage Wall Art Print
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