12 Cafés, Bakeries and Storefront Murals
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Some street art only needs a doorway, a bakery wall, or a café facade.
A place you were about to pass becomes the reason you stop. These storefront murals bring local stories, optical illusions, tributes, and small surprises into the street.
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☕ R9 Wall of Love — By Ilyn Artwork at R9 Café in Taipei, Taiwan 🇹🇼
At R9 Café, artist Ilyn Artwork turned the three-story wall into R9 Wall of Love. The mural works with the building’s windows and edges, adding painted balconies, small characters, birds, drinks, music, and café life. The gray building becomes an illustrated block where every window has its own scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: The original Chinese title, R9愛之牆, literally means “R9 Wall of Love.” In the artist’s post, the mural is described as a work meant for passing travelers to record warm memories of love — a nice reminder that some storefront murals are designed as social photo spots from the start. Source
More: Mural at R9 Café in Taipei, Taiwan
🔗 Follow Ilyn Artwork on Instagram and R9 Café on Instagram

🥖 Bread and Brushstrokes — By SMOK in Bruges, Belgium 🇧🇪
SMOK painted the wall of a working bakery as a tribute to craft. Street Art Cities documents the mural as a 2024 work for the third edition of The Bridges Street Art Festival, whose theme focused on craftsmanship and Bruges’ cultural legacy. The baker bends over the dough, while flour, warm light, hands, and brick make the wall feel like part of the bakery rather than just its exterior.
💡 Nerd Fact: The bakery wall fit the festival theme almost too perfectly: SMOK wrote that the 2024 edition of The Bridges focused on “crafts,” and because the wall belonged to a bakery, he chose the craft of baking. Source
More: SMOK’s Art Is Easy To Love (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow SMOK on Instagram

🫖 Chinatown Market — By Yip Yew Chong in Chinatown, Singapore 🇸🇬
Yip Yew Chong identifies this three-story mural as Chinatown Market, part of his “Dreams of Chinatown” series recalling the Chinatown he knew in the 1970s and 80s. A huge uncle pours tea from the third story, cups float between the windows, laundry hangs below, and the corner folds kopitiam culture into a busy wet-market scene.
💡 Kopitiam Fact: The word kopitiam carries two languages inside it: kopi means coffee in Malay, while tiam comes from Hokkien for shop. That mix fits Singapore’s old coffee-shop culture, where food, drinks, gossip, and neighborhood life often shared the same tables. Source
More: Beautiful Street Art in Chinatown, Singapore
🔗 Follow Yip Yew Chong on Instagram

🍷 La Guinguette — By Patrick Commecy in Brives-Charensac, France 🇫🇷
Patrick Commecy does not just paint a café front. A-Fresco’s page for La guinguette connects the scene to Saturday-night dances, local Verveine Authentique, and a nod to Joseph Servant, who created the town’s twinning committee in 1987. The blue storefront, bartender, balcony figure, flowers, tablecloth, and newspaper reader make the building feel like a local memory caught in daylight.
💡 Word Nerd Fact: A guinguette was not just any café. Collins defines the French word as an “open-air café or dance hall,” which fits the mural’s memory of Saturday-night dances. Source
More: Art That Feels Real (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit Patrick Commecy’s A-Fresco website

💡 Bright Yellow Light — By (fos) in Madrid, Spain 🇪🇸
Simple idea, strong result. At the vegan restaurant Rayen on Lope de Vega Street, (fos) turned a protected facade into a temporary optical installation: a painted lamp seems to spill yellow light across the doorway, furniture, sidewalk, and wall. Storefront design, street art, and perspective all share one beam.
💡 Name Nerd Fact: Even the collective’s name works like a small language trick: fos means “light” in Greek and “melted” in Catalan. For this Madrid installation, that double meaning became yellow duct tape, painted objects, and a lamp that seems to melt light across the storefront. Source
More: Now You See It! Bright Yellow Light
🔗 Visit (fos)’s project page

🌼 West Town in Bloom — By Ouizi in Chicago, USA 🇺🇸
Ouizi covers this brick wall with giant flowers that climb toward the sky. On the artist’s own mural page, the work is listed as West Town in Bloom, made in collaboration with Chicago Truborn Gallery, the West Town Chamber of Commerce, and West Town Bakery and Diner. Beside the bakery, the wall gets to bloom too.
💡 Botanical Nerd Fact: Ouizi’s flower murals often look decorative at first glance, but they can also work like painted plant lists. Street Art Utopia’s earlier post identifies this wall’s details as including a red admiral butterfly, daisies, a peony, apple blossoms, Japanese camellia, cosmos, and a ladybug. Source
More: Flowers for West Town by Ouizi in Chicago
🔗 Follow Ouizi on Instagram and West Town Bakery on Instagram

📖 Windows of Perception — By Miles Toland in Lucknow, India 🇮🇳
Miles Toland lists the Greenhouse Cafe work as Windows of Perception within his Walls With Soul project, a body of India murals made to reactivate spaces and feel woven into their surroundings. A reader sits inside a turquoise archway with a small bird nearby, giving the busy street a calm green pause.
💡 Nerd Fact: The little bird was not random studio symbolism. In Toland’s own note about the café mural, he said it was inspired by two bulbuls nesting in the branches of a potted plant about ten feet from the wall. Source
More: Street Art by Miles Toland in Lucknow, India
🔗 Follow Miles Toland on Instagram and The Greenhouse Cafe on Instagram

🐦 Birds in Flight — By Sax / Henry Blache in Paris, France 🇫🇷
Closed shop doors can make a street feel asleep. Sax, the street-art alias of French artist Henry Blache, went the other way, covering the shutters of Le Cabinet d’Amateur with birds in motion. The deep blue storefront gives the colors room to move.
More: Embracing Reality and Fantasy: 8 Powerful Street Art Murals
🔗 Follow Sax on Instagram

🐯 The Golden Tiger — By Cameron “CAMER1sf” Moberg in Modesto, California 🇺🇸
This storefront does not whisper. It roars. Cameron “CAMER1sf” Moberg fills the plain panels with a tiger, flowers, leaves, and butterflies. The wall now feels like a small jungle right on the sidewalk.
More: Beautiful Beasts (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow CAMER1sf on Instagram

🌹 Casa de Flores — By Ben Keller in Charlotte, North Carolina 🇺🇸
On the wall of Azteca Mexican Restaurant, Ben Keller paints a portrait with a clear sense of welcome. His mural gallery lists the work as Casa de Flores at 116 E Woodlawn Road in Charlotte. Red flowers, pearl earrings, a yellow blouse, and a soft expression give the corner a formal, festive feel.
More: 9 New Street Art Highlights You’ll Want to See Twice
🔗 Follow Ben Keller on Instagram

🍒 CAFE Y CACAO — By Letreros & YoSoyPelo in Blanco Arriba, Dominican Republic 🇩🇴
This wall is all coffee cherries, cacao pods, green leaves, sunshine, and local pride. In an artist post from YoSoyPelo, the work is tied directly to coffee and cacao in Blanco Arriba. It connects the street to what grows around it: not just decoration, but a bright tribute to the land.
💡 Crop Nerd Fact: Coffee and cacao are not just pretty symbols here. A World Bank report estimated that 80,000–100,000 Dominican farmers were producing coffee and cocoa at the time, making the two crops deeply tied to rural livelihoods in the country. Source
More: 9 New Street Art Highlights Around the World
🔗 Follow Letreros on Instagram and YoSoyPelo on Instagram

🍸 The Viceroy Glass — By Bobby Rogueone in Glasgow, Scotland 🇬🇧
Bobby Rogueone gives The Viceroy Bar & Club a ready-made photo moment. Local coverage from Glasgow Live described the work behind the Paisley Road West bar as a pint-glass mural built for people to step into. A painted woman holds the transparent glass, with a real person able to pose inside the illusion.
💡 Pub Nerd Fact: Local coverage framed this as a “pint glass” photo opportunity, not just a wall painting. That makes the viewer part of the joke and turns the bar’s exterior into a small piece of participatory public art. Source
More: Street Art by Bobby Rogueone in Glasgow, Scotland
🔗 Follow Bobby Rogueone on Instagram and The Viceroy Bar & Club on Instagram
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