Target x Rifle Paper Co.’s Room Divider Is a Small-Space Workhorse

Psst: It moonlights as a headboard.
Lindsey Mather Avatar
floral furniture and lighting in bedroom

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Just as winter really started to feel like forever, Target debuted a reminder that spring isn’t far off: Its flower-forward collaboration with Rifle Paper Co. The brand’s signature hand-painted blooms now grace 200-plus pieces that founder Anna Bond hopes bring “a bit of beauty to the everyday.” Think: headboards, accent chairs, lighting (a first for Rifle), and—our top pick—room dividers.

Room Divider Screen in Willowberry by Rifle Paper Co. x Target

$400

Room Divider Screen in Hydrangea by Rifle Paper Co. x Target

$400

The upholstered three-panel screens are available in 10 prints with cheery names like Garden Party and Strawberry Fields; we’re partial to the more classic options, Willowberry (berry-dotted greenery) and Hydrangea (that one’s self-explanatory). Yours will arrive preassembled and ready to visually separate your dining nook from your living area or that workout corner from the rest of your guest bedroom. 

green floral upholstered bed and room divider

But room delineation is just one of their talents. Target styled the dividers as three-dimensional backdrops for your nightstands, and we could easily imagine one being used as a giant pinboard in an office. Stretching to 72 inches, a screen is also plenty long enough to serve as a headboard for a standard queen. If you’re a maximalist at heart, here are a few other pieces from the collection to layer into your space. It’s all limited edition, so we expect the best of the bunch to go fast.

Upholstered Bed in Strawberry Fields by Rifle Paper Co. x Target

$1150

Ottoman in Mayfair by Rifle Paper Co. x Target

$250

4 Candles with 2 Candlestick Holders by Rifle Paper Co. x Target

$20
Lindsey Mather Avatar

Lindsey Mather

Digital Director

Lindsey Mather is a proud “words person” who oversees Domino’s content strategy and creation. Whenever she can, she squeezes in time to write and edit stories about the ways people shape their spaces—and how their spaces shape them.

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