Sci-fi wallpaper (and other designs for children)

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing on 20 July 1969, we dug deep into our collections and found this wonderfully whimsical wallpaper, designed for children’s bedroom walls.

The wallpaper was produced more than a decade before the moon landing and owes more to fantastical 1950s sci-fi animation than the reality of Apollo 11, but it shows how space travel captured the public’s imagination in the 1950s and 60s.

Wallpapers for children's rooms

This sci-fi wallpaper came from a particular genre of wallpaper designs especially created for children’s rooms or nurseries.

Prior to the 1840s, it was typical to find nurseries very plainly decorated with little ornament. But from the mid-19th century, nurseries increasingly became a focus of decoration and it is during this period that wallpapers specially designed for the nursery begin to appear.

Many wallpapers designed for children in the second half of the 19th century were made to be educative and uphold moral standards of the day. The illustrations themselves were often taken directly from children's books. One such wallpaper depicts the tale, Dick Whittington & his cat, which is divided into individual panels like pages from a book. The well-worn story follows Dick’s rise from poverty partly through a kindly family but mostly because of his rodent loving cat.

By the early 20th century, wallpaper design for children began to appear more fun with the use of nursery rhymes a key feature. Then in the 1950s and 60s, wallpapers for children often took on more popular themes associated with animation, television and sports.

Published on 
Michael Lech

Michael Lech

Curator

Michael Lech is a curator at MHNSW. He has worked on exhibitions, presented talks and written extensively on various aspects of the history of the home in Australia. Michael’s work has covered areas such as interior design, the history of wallpapers and furnishing textiles, the heritage movement, Sydney’s department stores and design history in Australia.

Phyllis Murphy in her East Malvern apartment, Melbourne, c1950
Wallpaper

Beyond the wallpaper: the life and work of Phyllis and John Murphy

A significant donation of more than 3,000 wallpaper samples to the Caroline Simpson Library reflects just one facet of the remarkable careers of Phyllis and John Murphy, partners in life, architecture and heritage conservation

Acquisition of the John and Phyllis Murphy wallpaper collection
Wallpaper

Wall to wall: a marvellous wallpaper collection

A remarkable donation of over 3,000 wallpaper samples by John and Phyllis Murphy adds to our existing collection to form Australia’s largest repository of historic wallpapers

Composite image of a selection of 4 walpapers
Wallpaper

Mr Fox’s wallpapers

The digitisation of NSW school files at NSW State Archives has resulted in an unusual discovery: 19th-century wallpaper samples