1980s Vintage Zen Wallpaper Rolls - Yuppie Stripe Teal Gold 90s Retro- (Set of 2 or 3 Rolls)

£40.00 - £60.00

About This Vintage Wallpaper

A Classic 1980s yuppie stripe design from Zen's Avalon range, in a teal colourway, it's perfect to blend seamlessly with modern furnishings.

Brand: Zen
Roll Size: 10.05m x 53cm
Quantity: 2 or 3 Full rolls
Design / Era / Style: 1980s - 1990s | Traditional striped pattern | Teal | Gold highlights | Yuppie era | Twisted ribbon | Classical design

Pattern Repeat: Straight match
Batch Numbers: All rolls same batch
Roll Type: Paper
Finish: Super smooth- satin finish
Condition: Excellent condition – all rolls are sealed in there original packaging. The first layer may need trimming, clean and well kept after that.

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Photos: Please see all images for colour, pattern and texture details.
Availability: Only these 5 rolls available (all same batch)
Note: Some older “pre-pasted” wallpapers may need new paste applied before hanging.

Postage: Orders are sent tracked. I usually post same or next working day (always within 3 working days).

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Any questions, please feel free to ask.

Explore my shop for more authentic vintage wallpapers from the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, featuring top brands such as Crown, Laura Ashley, Sanderson, Shand Kydd, Vymura, Carisma, Coloroll, Morris & Co, Walflair and many more.

Did You Know?

Victorian “sanitary wallpapers” of the late 1800s marked the first push toward safer wallcoverings, replacing arsenic pigments and setting early expectations for health-minded production. For most of the 20th century, however, wallpaper labelling stayed vague, with manufacturers using loose terms like “top quality wallpaper” rather than regulated standards. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Europe introduced unified EN performance symbols—covering washability, lightfastness and peelability—which finally standardised how quality was measured, but because their use wasn’t mandatory, wallpapers from this transitional era, like this Zen design, often show a blend of both systems, mixing old-style marketing language with only a partial set of the new recommended symbols.