In my aunt’s hallway in Lahore, there is a small painting that doesn’t quite go with the rest of her decor. It is framed with a thin gold border. It depicts a lakefront cottage, the kind of scene you might see on a biscuit tin. Decades ago, she painted it herself using a kit her brother had returned from a trip. Every time visitors come through, she still brings it up. The afternoons she spent working on it, not the painting itself. She recalls the quiet of those afternoons.
Strangely enough, in 2026, people are returning to painting by numbers because of that kind of memory. The kits never truly disappeared. Until something changed, they simply sat in the corner of craft stores, ridiculed as something for agitated kids or retirees. People seem to be fed up with being told to be creative these days. They’re also sick of mindfulness apps that require them to breathe in time with the voice of a stranger. None of that is required when you sit down with a numbered canvas. There are already regulations in place. You simply do as they say.

Leonardo da Vinci’s practice of assigning partial work to his apprentices is said to have inspired Dan Robbins, who created the first kits at Palmer Paint Company. It’s a romantic tale that may have been polished over time. According to records, the kits were selling at a remarkable rate by 1955 and were displayed in both formal and informal settings, including suburban dens and the White House. They were despised by critics. They were written off as the end of taste by Clement Greenberg’s circle. However, the kits outlived the majority of those critics, which speaks to what people genuinely desire from wall art.
Who is purchasing them now is a mystery. Mothers with two hours on Sundays, wellness writers, and software engineers. The structure is not as restrictive as previously believed. It’s the allure. According to British psychotherapist Kate Lewis, an anxious mind is worn out by making decisions all the time. Eliminating the choice may seem like a tiny act of kindness. You’re not wondering if you have anything to say while gazing at a blank canvas. The canvas has already expressed itself. All you’re doing is assisting it in speaking.
During the pandemic years, I witnessed a few friends pick up these kits and continue to do so long after the lockdowns were lifted. Every two months, one of them, an architect, completes a painting. She informed me that she enjoys the work’s limited scope. There is a start and a finish. There is nothing like that in her real job. As you watched her explain it, it became clear that the borders surrounding the painting, rather than the painting itself, were what made it appealing.
One could argue that this is a rejection of something more significant. of the visual world being overtaken by generative AI. of social media’s insistence that everything be intimate and expressive. That might be overinterpreting it. However, there is a subtle logic to taking a brush, aligning it with a numbered patch, and precisely filling in the blanks. The mayhem beyond the canvas is enormous. Its discipline is modest, controllable, and sufficient in some way.
