Where To Start Wallpapering Guide
"Where do I start wallpapering this room?" is one of the most common questions decorators are asked. Choosing the right starting point helps your pattern look balanced, keeps awkward slivers of wallpaper to a minimum and makes it easier to work neatly around features such as fireplaces and windows.
Large vs Small Pattern Wallpapers

Where to Start Wallpapering in Rooms with Windows
When your main wall has two windows, you have two options depending on the pattern and how much wall space is left on either side.
Option 1 – Centre the wallpaper between the windows
For a strong vertical pattern (for example a stripe, trellis or geometric), you can centre a full drop of wallpaper between the windows so the design runs symmetrically.

Before committing, check how much wall you will have left at each outside edge. If centring the drop leaves very narrow strips of wallpaper either side, it is usually better to use option 2.
Option 2 – Butt two lengths on the centre line
Instead of centring a single drop, you can position the vertical centre line where two drops meet. This gives a more even width of wallpaper at each outside edge and avoids thin strips.

How to Wallpaper a Simple Rectangular Room
In a straightforward rectangular or square room using a small-scale pattern or semi-plain design, you don"t usually need to centralise the pattern. Instead, you choose a sensible starting corner and work methodically around the room.

- Start close to a corner, but don"t use the corner itself as your vertical reference – always create a plumb line with a level or plumb bob.
- Hang the first length so there is a partial width left to hang into the corner later.
- Work around the room, keeping each new drop tightly butted to the last.
- When you return to the starting corner, the final piece will be the remaining partial width that completes the corner.
Where to Start in a Room with a Chimney Breast
If your wallpaper does not need to be centred, you can treat a chimney breast room similarly to a plain rectangular space. However, with a bold pattern or motif it usually looks much better if you centralise the design on the chimney breast first.

- Mark the centre line of the chimney breast and hang the first drop so the pattern is centred on this line.
- Work outwards over the external corner to one side and into the first internal corner.
- Return to the centre and repeat on the other side of the chimney breast.
- Continue around the rest of the room and finish in the internal corner next to the breast, where any small pattern discrepancy is least noticeable.
Wallpapering Tips – Choosing the Best Starting Point
Try to choose a starting corner that is relatively inconspicuous when you walk into the room – for example, the corner behind the door or beside a tall bookcase. If you have a full-height bookcase or built-in wardrobe, you can often start to one side and finish behind it so there is no visible join at all.
For more detailed step-by-step techniques, see our other guides:
Ready to choose your wallpaper?
Once you know where to start, you can focus on finding the perfect design. Explore our curated collections:
- Living room wallpaper
- Bedroom wallpaper
- Hallway & stairs wallpaper
- Bathroom wallpaper and kitchen wallpaper for moisture-prone rooms
- Feature wallpaper and mural wallpaper for statement walls