Site icon Home Improvement Press

A Designer’s Guide to MDC and Momentum Wallcovering Pattern Categories

Commercial Wallpaper

Commercial Wallpaper

For designers working on commercial interiors, two brands consistently anchor the contract wallcovering shortlist: MDC Interior Solutions and Momentum Textiles & Wallcovering. Both have decades of design experience, both bring named-designer collaborations to the table, and both maintain broad pattern libraries built for hospitality, healthcare, corporate, and retail interiors. But each has a different pattern philosophy. Knowing how the two catalogs are organized and where each is strongest saves a designer hour of resource-library searching.

MDC Covering Pattern Categories

MDC covering is structured around a few cores’ product lines, with the Designer Gallery program acting as the brand’s design showcase.

The major MDC pattern categories include:

The Designer Gallery program is one of the strongest entry points for hospitality and corporate designers who want named-designer provenance. Each pattern in the program is printed on vinyl and meets Type II requirements per the Wallcoverings Association, with washability, scrubbability, and stain resistance built in.

Momentum Wallcovering Pattern Categories

Momentum operates as a portfolio of brands and sub-collections rather than a single linear catalog.

Major Momentum wallcovering categories include:

The sub-brand structure gives designers different design voices under one parent: Lanark for performance-driven prints and textures (including the heavy-duty P3TEC line), Magnolia Home Commercial for Joanna Gaines’ aesthetic translated to contract use, Stacy Garcia for designer-named hospitality patterns, and Symphony for sophisticated textures and statement designs.

Comparing Pattern Strengths Side by Side

Both catalogs cover the same big commercial sectors. Where they differ is in pattern philosophy and sub-collection strategy.

How Designers Use Each in Practice

MDC covering tends to anchor designer-led hospitality and corporate projects where named-designer provenance and texture variety matter. The Designer Gallery program, in particular, gives specifiers something compelling to present to a client during the design review.

Momentum wallcovering tends to anchor large-portfolio hospitality, healthcare, and multifamily projects where designers benefit from the variety of sub-brands. Specifying a Lanark P3TEC corridor and a Stacy Garcia guest room from the same parent organization simplifies billing, lead time coordination, and rep contact.

In practice, many designers carry both libraries in their resource collection and pull from each depending on the project’s priorities, design-forward provenance, sustainability targets, durability requirements, or sub-brand variety.

Conclusion

Commercial Wall Decor is a trusted national supplier carrying MDC covering and Momentum wallcovering alongside other leading contract brands from manufacturers in the United States, Europe, and Japan. The team supports designers, architects, and facility managers through every stage of the specification process.

Exit mobile version