The home office is the one room that benefits most from having something meaningful on the wall — it's where you spend focused hours, take video calls, and ideally feel like yourself rather than a generic remote worker. For motorsport fans, it's also the room where a circuit print or race car illustration makes complete sense: considered enough to look professional, personal enough to say something.
This guide covers what works in a home office specifically, and why.
Why Motorsport Art Works in a Professional Setting
The illustrated style of Illustrated Tracks prints — clean lines, precise geometry, strong but controlled colour — reads as design rather than sports memorabilia. A circuit map of Suzuka or Spa on the wall behind your desk doesn't look like a sports poster; it looks like a considered piece of graphic art. Colleagues on video calls will notice it. Most won't even know what it is — they'll just know it looks good.
This is the difference between illustrated art and a branded team poster. One fits a professional environment; the other belongs in a fan room.
Best Circuit Prints for an Office Wall
Circuit maps have a geometric quality that suits an office environment particularly well. The track layout as a graphic object — precise, clean, strongly linear — sits comfortably alongside books, monitors, and desk furniture. The most popular choices for office display tend to be tracks with distinctive, immediately recognisable shapes:
- Monaco — tight and immediately recognisable, striking in a small format
- Suzuka — the figure-eight layout is unique and visually interesting even to non-fans
- Spa-Francorchamps — the flowing curves translate beautifully into graphic form
- Silverstone — instantly familiar to British fans, confident on a wall
Shop the Circuit de Monaco Print →
Shop the Suzuka International Racing Course Print →
Shop the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps Print →
Shop the Silverstone Circuit Print →
Format Recommendations for a Home Office
For most home office walls, A2 (42 x 59.4 cm) is the ideal size — large enough to read clearly on camera, not so large it dominates the room. If the wall behind your desk is wider and you want more visual presence, A1 or a large format print works well as a centrepiece, possibly with smaller prints flanking it.
The acrylic perspex format is particularly well-suited to office use — the high-gloss finish photographs well on video calls, and the frameless floating mount looks contemporary without requiring any additional framing investment.
Placement for Video Calls
The standard advice is to hang art so the centre sits at your seated eye level — roughly 140–145 cm from the floor when you're seated at a desk. Practically, this means the art appears clearly over your shoulder on camera rather than cut off at the top of the frame or disappearing above your head. Test with your camera before committing to the final hanging position.
Avoid glossy formats directly opposite a window — the reflection on camera can be distracting. If your office has windows facing your desk, matte paper prints or a wall-mounted canvas are easier to manage than high-gloss acrylic from that specific angle.
Browse All F1 Circuit Prints →
Browse All Motorsport Prints →

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