According to community lore, a renovator once tried to replace these custom walls with standard drywall. They reported that no matter how many times they deleted the "I’ve Been Framed" patterns, the frames would reappear by the next sunrise, sometimes shifted slightly, as if the house itself was watching the builder through the empty spaces.
Luna Villareal , often seen as the quiet, artistic soul of her family, was said to have retreated to the basement during the long months following her mother’s disappearance. There, she created a series of "I’ve Been Framed" walls—an avant-garde collection of custom wall patterns and moldings that blended classic Scandi minimalism with a haunting, gallery-style aesthetic. The Legend of the Framed Walls
Today, many "Simmers" use these walls to give their homes a touch of "Luna’s Mystery." They are a favorite for those building "Scandi-Kids" rooms or sophisticated art galleries. But the legend remains: when you use these walls, you aren't just choosing a color; you're framing a story that might not want to be told. I’ve Been Framed Walls at Luna Sims
I've Been Framed — Pedro de Alcantara: Integrated Practice
The story goes that Luna wasn't just decorating; she was documenting. Every "framed" section of the wall wasn't meant for a painting, but to trap a specific moment in time. According to community lore, a renovator once tried
Servants claimed that if you stood perfectly still near the gilded trims, you could hear the muffled conversations of Sims from decades past, as if the very plaster had been "framed" for a crime it didn't commit. The Disappearing Decorator
In the quiet, fog-drenched corners of Windenburg, a rumor persists among the town’s elite builders about a forgotten wing of the Villareal estate—a place where the walls don’t just hold up the roof; they hold onto secrets. There, she created a series of "I’ve Been
Local decorators whispered that one specific swatch—the "Red Herring"—was placed in the hallway to lead unwanted guests away from the family’s true secrets.