The jungle after dark. The same vast banana leaves — every vein, every curve, every waxy surface rendered with full painterly precision — now emerge from a ground of pure black, their greens deepened and intensified by the darkness behind them. Acid green at the lightest points, deep forest and near-black in the shadows, with the brown flower bracts glowing warmly where they catch a trace of light: the palette is extraordinary, and the black ground is what makes it so.
Where the white version is tropical and fresh, the black version is primal and immersive. The wall does not simply display the foliage — it disappears into it. The room becomes the jungle. The boundary between surface and space dissolves in the best possible way, and what remains is an environment rather than a decoration.
This is one of the most dramatic and committed design choices available in wallpaper. It asks something of a room — a willingness to be transformed, to be taken seriously, to be inhabited rather than merely occupied. The rooms that answer that call become unforgettable. Exceptional in dining rooms, bedrooms, home bars, hallways and any space where the intention is to create an atmosphere that exists nowhere else.