Rumpl Artist Series Blankets

We love the blankets from Rumpl here at The Coolector and if you’re looking to turn heads on your next camping trip, their ace-looking Artist Series Blankets are going to tick all of the right boxes. Check out some of the best offerings from the talented Rumpl artists below:


Hokusai Great Wave Blanket

Aaron Kai, an artist, husband, and father from Hilo, Hawaii, has created a new design for Rumpl’s Original Puffy Blanket. The blanket is inspired by Kai’s childhood growing up on the Big Island, and features his signature waves. The Rumpl x Aaron Kai Original Puffy Blanket Hokusai Great Wave is the perfect way to relax and enjoy the rays and waves, whether you’re at home or on the go.


Cozy Dimensions Blanket

Nathan Brown is a Nashville-based artist and muralist who is inspired by a variety of sources, including skateboarding, travel, graffiti, gradient natural colour palettes, city life, and structural lines in architecture. He uses these inspirations to create vibrant and eye-catching murals that often feature bold colours and geometric shapes.


Lauterbrunnen Valley Blanket

Corinne Weidmann is a Swiss-born and based artist who specializes in modern mountainscapes and landscapes of Europe and the Pacific Northwest. The Original Puffy Blanket Lauterbrunnen Valley was inspired by the valley that is near a small village in the Swiss Alps with a population of 2,500 people.


Bolded Blossoms Blanket

Shae Anthony is an Atlanta-based artist who was inspired by the lack of BIPOC representation in commercial art and illustrations that celebrate women of color and their unique experiences.


Backbone Blanket

Maggie Thompson, a Fond du Lac Ojibwe, was born and raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is a textile artist and designer who draws inspiration from her Ojibwe heritage. Her work explores family history, as well as themes and subject matter that are relevant to the broader Native American experience.


Blazing Gaia Blanket

This “Geometriart” print is created by Courtenay Pollock, who made a name for himself making tie dye art for the Grateful Dead (yeah, them).


Leo Davie