Model Winnie Harlow turned a photograph from a Zac Posen shoot into custom wallpaper for her powder room [1, 2].
The project demonstrates a fusion of high fashion and interior design, illustrating how professional imagery is being repurposed for personalized home aesthetics. By scaling a fashion editorial image to cover the walls of a functional space, Harlow bridges the gap between commercial art and residential decor.
Harlow collaborated with designer Zac Posen for the original shoot that provided the imagery [1, 2]. The resulting wallpaper transforms the small space into a curated gallery, utilizing the scale of the photograph to create a bold visual statement in the home [1].
Architectural Digest documented the process and the final result of the installation [1]. The design choice reflects a growing trend in luxury interiors where homeowners use bespoke, large-scale photography to personalize specific rooms, particularly smaller areas like powder rooms where daring patterns are more common [2].
This approach to interior styling allows the model to integrate her professional portfolio into her private living environment. The use of a Posen image ensures the room maintains a high-fashion sensibility while serving as a permanent tribute to the collaboration between the model and the designer [1, 2].
“Winnie Harlow turned a photograph from a Zac Posen shoot into custom wallpaper”
This transition of fashion imagery into architectural elements highlights the blurring line between professional branding and personal interior design. As high-profile figures increasingly curate their homes as extensions of their public personas, the use of bespoke, large-scale art from their own careers creates a feedback loop between their professional identity and their private sanctuary.



