Verdure & Vale Journal
How-To

Five Ways to Hang a Tapestry (Without Ruining It)

A tapestry hangs by its whole top edge, not a single nail — get that principle right and it will drape beautifully for decades; get it wrong and you'll fight sag, puckering and torn fibres.

A woven tapestry mounted flat on a wall with an even top edge

The golden rule: distribute the weight

Textiles are heavy and they pull downward across their entire width. The mistake that ruins tapestries is concentrating that load on one or two points — a couple of pushpins in the corners will slowly tear the weave and leave the middle sagging. Every good method below shares one goal: spread the weight evenly along the full top edge. Choose based on the tapestry's size, weight and whether you can sew or attach a rod pocket.

1. Rod pocket with a decorative rod

The classic, and for most homes the best. A sewn-in sleeve (or one added with iron-on hem tape) runs along the back of the top edge; a curtain or decorative rod slides through and rests on wall brackets. Weight is shared across the entire rod, the tapestry hangs flat, and nothing pierces the weave.

2. Hook-and-loop (Velcro) strip

The method museums often prefer for lighter textiles. Sew (never glue) the soft loop side of an industrial hook-and-loop strip to a fabric tape, then stitch that tape to the top edge. Staple or screw the stiff hook side to a wooden batten mounted on the wall. The tapestry presses on and lifts off cleanly.

3. Wall-mounted clips or clamp bars

Decorative clips or a pair of magnetic/clamping bars grip the top edge without sewing. Quick to install and easy to swap pieces seasonally.

4. The museum casing method

The conservation gold standard for valuable or antique weaves. A fabric casing (a linen sleeve) is hand-stitched to the reverse and a rigid, sealed wooden slat or aluminium bar is inserted. The bar rests on brackets, so the textile bears no strain at all — the sleeve carries everything and the stitching spreads it across many centimetres of fabric rather than a seam.

5. Tapestry hanging bars (top and bottom)

Purpose-made hanging bar sets sandwich the top edge between two slats (often magnetic) and add a matching weighted bar at the bottom. The top bar hangs from the wall; the bottom bar's weight keeps the piece taut and pucker-free.

Three things that damage tapestries — avoid them

Planning a new feature wall?

Every tapestry in our collection lists its weight and whether it ships with a rod pocket, so you can choose the right hanging method before it arrives. Shop tapestries by size and weight →

Match the method to the piece and the weight will take care of itself. If you're still deciding on dimensions, start with our guide to choosing the right tapestry size for any wall — the right size hung the right way is the whole game.