Shimmering glass beads. Slick animal skins. Gleaming pearlescents. Glossy vinyls. These are just some of the materials that Eunice Bokstrom might encounter in a day’s work.
No, she’s not a costume designer or a luxury fabric dealer. She is a professional wall covering installer and, despite the less-than-stellar reputation wallpaper has had in the past, business is booming these days. “Some parts of the market have never been slow, especially the very high end,” she explains. “But because it’s back in movie backdrops, TV shows and magazines, it’s hitting kind of a critical mass.”
It turns out that, while homeowners were experimenting with the now-questionable do-it-yourself paint trends of the late 1990s and early 2000s (sponges and stencils and stamps, oh my!), the wallpaper industry was quietly stepping up its game. Technological developments in digital printing, as well as novelty and high-performance materials, have resulted in an unbelievable array of options, including custom prints. Homeowners who had previously sworn off wall coverings are beginning to come around.
It’s not just the appearance of wallpaper that has improved; the removal process is no longer the marriage-testing nightmare it once was. “One of the things that’s newer in the industry is a non-woven,” explains Bokstrom. “So it’s not paper. It’s made of cellulose fibres or rayon and all kind of melded together so that when the material is removed from the wall, it’s strippable in one layer.”
Real estate agent Ashley Tichkowsky, who recently installed wallpaper in her own home, finds many homebuyers are not aware of how far the medium has come in recent years. “People are nervous about it because they think it’s impractical and they think it’s permanent,” she explains. “They think it’s way harder to change than paint. But if it’s [wallpaper] that’s newer, then it’s not going to be hard to remove.”