If you love bedrooms that feel warm, colorful, and full of life, you are going to love what is coming up. These boho bedrooms mix patterns, textures, and natural materials in the best ways. Each one has its own fun personality while still feeling relaxed and comfortable. Get ready to steal some seriously good ideas for your own space!
1. Colorful Mandala Tapestry With Layered Boho Textiles

A giant mandala tapestry with a bright gold border hangs above the bed and covers almost the entire wall. The bed has white bedding layered with a fringed striped throw in purple, red, and cream, plus patterned pillows in terracotta and dark navy.
The tapestry does the heavy lifting for color so the white bedding does not compete with it. The woven jute rug in deep red and navy on the floor ties all the warm tones together without adding more wall clutter.
Hang one large tapestry behind your bed instead of buying multiple smaller pieces of art. One bold, patterned tapestry creates more impact and costs less than filling the wall with frames.
2. Terracotta Accent Wall With Cream Macrame and Layered Throws

The back wall is painted a deep terracotta orange and a cream knotted macrame wall hanging with long fringe hangs above the pillow stack. The bed layers a sage green textured throw, a burnt orange fringed blanket, and white linen bedding all at once.
The warm terracotta wall makes the cream macrame pop without needing any extra lighting or art around it. The olive green and rust tones in the throw blankets repeat the wall color in a softer way so nothing feels too intense.
Paint just one wall behind your bed in a warm earthy tone like terracotta or clay. Then hang a single cream macrame piece centered above the pillows to let the wall color do most of the work.
3. Peach Wicker Pendant With Mustard Diamond-Print Throw and Hanging Pothos

A wide dome-shaped pendant light in woven peach rattan hangs from the ceiling above a light wood bed frame. Two mustard yellow pillows with white diamond geometric patterns sit against beige euro shams, and a matching mustard throw with fringe drapes across the white duvet.
The peach pendant light pulls together the warm golden tones in the mustard bedding without making the all-white room feel too busy. A round black-framed mirror on the wall reflects a hanging pothos plant, which makes the greenery feel doubled without needing extra plants.
Hang a trailing pothos in a macrame hanger near a mirror so the reflection makes your plant look fuller than it actually is. It is an easy trick that adds life to a small white bedroom without taking up any floor space.
4. Red Floral Toile Wallpaper With Gold Swing-Arm Sconces

The entire wall behind the bed is covered in red and white toile wallpaper printed with birds, flowers, and branches. Two gold swing-arm sconces with white drum shades flank a large framed lion print, and the bed has red floral euro shams with a solid orange-red velvet lumbar pillow in front.
The white duvet keeps the bed from feeling too busy against the loud wallpaper. The red and white striped rug on the floor repeats the two-tone color scheme so the whole room feels planned and pulled in one direction.
Try placing one bold piece of art directly on top of busy wallpaper instead of leaving that space empty. A large wood-framed print holds its own against the pattern because the thick frame creates a clear border between the art and the wall.
5. Crinkled Linen Quilt With Weathered Wood Dressers and Jute Rug

The bed is covered in a rumpled natural linen quilt in a warm oatmeal tone next to a tall antique pine dresser with ring-pull hardware. A chunky woven jute rug covers the floor and a shiplap wall painted soft gray runs behind both pieces of furniture.
The worn wood grain on the dresser and the matching distressed nightstand make the room feel like it has been lived in for years in the best way. A loose bouquet of eucalyptus branches in a white crochet vase by the window adds a fresh green note without making the room feel fussy.
Look for mismatched antique wood dressers at thrift stores and use them together in the same room. The different shapes and sizes actually work better than matching sets because they give the room that relaxed, collected-over-time feeling.
6. Dark Carved Headboard With African Masks and Moroccan Lantern

A dark carved wood headboard with a decorative cutout sits against a white wall hung with two large black African masks on the left side. A brass Moroccan lantern with amber glass hangs between the masks and the bed, and a rust-colored fabric wall hanging with fringe decorates the right wall beside the curtain.
The warm amber glow from the Moroccan lantern makes the dark wood tones in the headboard and the carved nightstand look richer. The layered patchwork rug in navy, rust, and cream on the floor ties together every color already on the walls and bed.
Hang two or three pieces of collected wall art at different heights on one side of the bed instead of centering everything above the headboard. Grouping items to one side like this makes the wall feel curated rather than cluttered.
7. Dark Floral Mural Wall With Blush Pink Upholstered Bed

A floor-to-ceiling botanical mural covers the wall behind the bed with sunflowers, dahlias, and wild grasses painted in deep jewel tones against a dark charcoal gray background. The bed has a rounded blush pink upholstered headboard and frame, white textured bedding, and a purple velvet hexagon-print pillow layered in front of soft pink euro shams.
The pale pink bed frame against the dark moody mural creates a strong contrast that makes both elements stand out more than they would on their own. A small round brass and marble side table with a chrome globe lamp keeps the bedside from feeling too heavy next to all that color.
If a full mural feels like too big a commitment, look for peel-and-stick botanical wallpaper panels and apply them only to the wall directly behind your bed. You get the same dramatic effect without permanent installation.
8. Low Wood Platform Bed With Chunky Knit Throw and Jute Layered Rugs

A low natural wood platform bed sits close to a large double window that fills the room with soft morning light. The bed has white linen bedding topped with a cream chunky knit throw with long fringe tassels and one rust-colored shaggy pillow, while a large jute rug and a smaller round woven rug layer underneath.
The low bed frame keeps the room feeling open and airy instead of heavy, which works perfectly with the all-white walls and the bright window behind it. Tall dried pampas grass in a woven basket on the left side adds vertical height without blocking any of the natural light.
Layer two rugs of different textures under your bed to add warmth to a light-colored room without painting the walls. A large flat-weave jute rug as the base with a smaller round braided rug on top gives you depth and pattern for under $100 total.
9. All-Neutral Dream Catcher Gallery Wall With Pampas Grass Flanking the Bed

A white wall holds six woven rattan pieces of different sizes arranged in a loose cluster above the bed, with a large open-ring dream catcher with brown and white feathers as the centerpiece. Tall dried pampas grass in matching cylindrical pots stands on both sides of the bed, and the bedding layers cream quilted euro shams, a tufted diamond-pattern pillow, and a fringed tassel throw all in the same sand and ivory tones.
Every single element in this room stays within a three-shade range of tan, cream, and white, which makes the different textures pop instead of blending into each other. The round rattan wall pieces vary in size and weave pattern so the gallery wall has visual movement even without any color.
Collect woven wall pieces in different sizes from thrift stores and craft stores and hang them together above your bed. Keeping them all in natural tan and brown tones makes a mix of unmatched pieces look like an intentional set.
10. Large Macrame Wall Hanging With Kilim Rug and Tropical Floor Plants

A wide cream macrame wall hanging with long knotted fringe hangs from a wooden dowel above the bed, with a second smaller macrame piece hanging beside it at a lower height. The low wood platform bed has white bedding with a cream tasseled throw and rust orange square pillows, and a bright geometric kilim rug in red, orange, and blue covers the floor below.
The tall areca palm and the large-leaf rubber plant on either side of the bed bring in so much green that the room feels alive even with white walls. A small diamond-shaped woven textile hanging on the right wall near the window breaks up the empty space between the plants without competing with the large macrame piece.
Place your largest plant directly beside your bed on the floor instead of across the room. A tall areca palm or fiddle leaf fig right next to the mattress makes the bed feel nestled in greenery, which adds way more warmth than a plant shoved in a corner.
11. Rainbow Striped Bedding With Macrame Wall Cluster on White Brick

The bed is piled with a multicolor striped blanket in green, pink, red, and teal alongside a bright floral pillow bursting with orange and magenta blooms against purple euro shams. Two cream macrame wall hangings of different sizes cluster on the white painted brick wall above the bed, and a colorful geometric patchwork rug covers the floor.
The exposed white brick wall gives all that saturated color somewhere to breathe so the room does not feel overwhelming. Terracotta pots with trailing green plants line the window ledge and a large leafy plant on the floor anchor the bright colors with natural texture.
Pick one pattern to be your loudest piece, like a multicolor striped blanket, and then let everything else in the room be a single bold color that matches one stripe in it. This trick makes a maximalist bed look intentional rather than random.
12. Woven Kilim Rug Hung as Headboard With Orange Floral Duvet

A large flat-woven textile with a zigzag geometric pattern in red, pink, teal, and orange hangs from a bamboo dowel rod and acts as the headboard on an otherwise plain white wall. The bed layers a bright orange duvet printed with colorful flowers and butterflies, hot pink shams, two red pintuck throw pillows, and a red and white tweed fringe blanket draped across the foot.
The bamboo rod keeps the hanging flat and straight so the textile reads clearly as a deliberate design choice and not just a thrown-up blanket. Two matching table lamps with white shades on dark wood nightstands on each side frame the textile symmetrically, which grounds the whole bright setup.
Hang a colorful flat-woven rug or textile from a wooden dowel rod above your bed as a free headboard. It costs a fraction of an upholstered headboard and you can swap it out any time your style changes.
13. Tiered Wicker Pendant Over Platform Bed With Kilim Rug and Areca Palm

A tiered cylindrical wicker pendant light hangs from the ceiling above a low natural wood platform bed with white linen bedding and a cream tasseled throw blanket. A large kilim rug in red, orange, blue, and ivory geometric diamonds covers most of the floor, and a tall areca palm stands in the corner next to the window beside a small orange wood nightstand.
The bright kilim rug does all the color work from the floor up so the white walls and white bedding stay clean and restful above it. Two macrame wall hangings of different sizes sit side by side above the bed with a small diamond-shaped woven textile near the window, repeating the natural fiber theme without adding more color.
Use a bold patterned kilim rug as your room’s only source of strong color and keep everything above the floor neutral. This approach lets you switch out the rug for a completely different color palette without repainting or buying new furniture.
14. Sloped Ceiling Floor Nook With Stacked Rust and Cream Boho Pillows

A low sloped attic ceiling with a bare driftwood beam runs above a floor-level lounging nook covered in layered rugs, one with a brown and tan geometric tribal print and one cream fringe flatweave on top. The nook holds a large collection of throw pillows in rust orange mud cloth print, cream with scattered dots, and warm sand solid covers all piled together with no headboard or bed frame in sight.
The white painted wood plank floor and bright white walls make the warm rust and amber tones in the pillows feel even richer against them. A small dried grass arrangement in a woven basket and a cluster of terracotta pots with green herbs on the window ledge add softness to the sharp angles of the sloped ceiling.
Turn an awkward attic corner or sloped wall area into a floor-level reading nook by layering two flat rugs and stacking at least six throw pillows of different sizes along the wall. You need zero furniture and it takes less than an afternoon to set up.
15. Reclaimed Wood Headboard With Mustard Cable Knit Runner and Beaded Pendant

Wide horizontal planks of weathered reclaimed wood in mixed brown and gray tones form a tall DIY-style headboard that spans the full width of the bed. The white linen duvet has a thick mustard yellow cable knit throw laid across the foot, and the pillows include a rust tufted square, a small Aztec geometric lumbar, and a floral print in terracotta and green.
A beaded pendant light with a woven rattan cap and hanging wood bead strands drops from the ceiling directly above the headboard and ties together all the warm brown tones in the wood planks. A bold Persian-style rug in red, teal, and orange on the floor repeats every color already in the pillow stack.
Build a reclaimed wood headboard by screwing horizontal fence boards or pallet planks to a plywood backing and leaning it against the wall behind your bed. You do not need to attach it to the bed frame and the whole project costs under $50 in materials.
16. Built-In Bunk Beds With Red and Blue Floral Wallpaper Wrapping the Sloped Ceiling

White shiplap built-in bunk beds with walnut wood rail accents sit tucked into the wall of an attic room where a red, blue, and cream floral block-print wallpaper covers every angled surface including the sloped ceiling. The lower bunk has a cream crochet blanket with long fringe, a peach cotton throw, striped and printed pillows in tan and forest green, and a small stuffed mouse toy sitting at the foot.
The deep navy blue wainscoting painted on the lower half of the back wall gives the floral wallpaper a strong grounding line so it does not feel like the pattern takes over the whole room. A small wooden clothing rack with white dresses hanging on it and a fluffy sheepskin rug on the carpet floor make the space feel like a real child’s room and not just a showroom.
If you have a sloped attic ceiling, wrap it in wallpaper instead of painting it a flat color. Carrying the pattern from the wall onto the ceiling makes the awkward angle feel like a design feature instead of a flaw.