Cirqa Tiki Recycled Wallcovering

Tiki Recycled Wallcovering from Cirqa offers a tropical texture inspired by stone, beads, and natural reeds. It has a subtle multi-watercolor print and a bamboo texture with deep reedlike embossing and metallic accents. Its heavy texture makes it well suited for renovations with uneven walls. Low in VOCs due to its water-based inks and adhesives, Tiki is made with 20% recycled content drawn from parent company LSI Wallcoverings Second-Look recycling program. The Type II, 20-ounce vinyl wallcovering comes in 18 nature-inspired colors from blue-green pear to beachy sand to earthy curry. It measures an average of 52" to 54" wide. www.cirqawallcovering.com

Tiki Recycled Wallcovering from Cirqa offers a tropical texture inspired by stone, beads, and natural reeds. It has a subtle multi-watercolor print and a bamboo texture with deep reedlike embossing and metallic accents. Its heavy texture makes it well suited for renovations with uneven walls. Low in VOCs due to its water-based inks and adhesives, Tiki is made with 20% recycled content drawn from parent company LSI Wallcoverings Second-Look recycling program. The Type II, 20-ounce vinyl wallcovering comes in 18 nature-inspired colors from blue-green pear to beachy sand to earthy curry. It measures an average of 52" to 54" wide. www.cirqawallcovering.com

Tiki Recycled Wallcovering from Cirqa offers a tropical texture inspired by stone, beads, and natural reeds. It has a subtle multi-watercolor print and a bamboo texture with deep reedlike embossing and metallic accents. Its heavy texture makes it well suited for renovations with uneven walls. Low in VOCs due to its water-based inks and adhesives, Tiki is made with 20% recycled content drawn from parent company LSI Wallcoverings’ Second-Look recycling program. The Type II, 20-ounce vinyl wallcovering comes in 18 nature-inspired colors from blue-green pear to beachy sand to earthy curry. It measures an average of 52″ to 54″ wide. cirqawallcovering.com

About the Author

Jennifer Brite

Jennifer Brite is a design journalist and public-health scientist who is currently pursuing a doctorate in public health with a concentration in epidemiology and demography at the City University of New York. For ARCHITECT, she writes about new products and sustainable design.

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