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Curated pack · bohemian cad blocks

Free bohemian interior CAD block pack for AutoCAD

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 25 Jan 2025 · Updated 22 Jan 2026

Bohemian interiors are layered, relaxed and a little improvised — rattan and cane seating, floor cushions and poufs, low tables, hanging plants and overlapping rugs all sharing a room without a rigid grid. A layout reads as boho when the blocks themselves are casual and varied, so this free bohemian interior CAD block pack collects that mix — rattan lounge and peacock chairs, floor poufs and ottomans, low woven coffee tables, plant stands, layered rugs and macramé hanging symbols — in DWG and DXF at true millimetre dimensions, ready for AutoCAD 2004 or later. All free for personal and commercial use, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution.

Use the pack for relaxed living rooms, cafés and juice bars, yoga and creative studios, boutique retail and festival or pop-up spaces. The blocks are scaled, so even an intentionally loose, layered plan still has to obey real clearances and seat counts — which is exactly where drawing to scale keeps a free-spirited scheme buildable.

Boho's looseness is deceptive: it works because the layering is controlled, not chaotic. Scaled blocks let you stack rugs, poufs and plants convincingly while keeping circulation and seating numbers honest.

What the bohemian pack covers

The set spans relaxed, textural pieces. Seating: rattan and cane lounge chairs, peacock chairs, low modular floor sofas, poufs and large floor cushions. Tables: low woven and carved coffee tables, drum and stool side tables. Greenery and decor: plant stands, large potted plants, hanging-plant symbols, layered rug outlines and floor-lamp and lantern blocks. Storage: low open shelving and woven baskets drawn as plan footprints.

The defining trait is variety and lowness — mismatched pieces sitting close to the floor. Rugs come as several sizes so you can deliberately overlap them, which is a signature boho move you can plan in plan view rather than improvise.

Typical bohemian sizes to design around

Use these as starting envelopes. A low modular floor sofa runs roughly 1800–2400 mm depending on how many modules you array, with a low seat height around 350–420 mm. Rattan lounge and peacock chairs sit in a 700–900 mm footprint, peacock chairs reading wider because of their flared backs. Floor poufs are commonly 450–600 mm across. Low coffee tables land at 350–420 mm high and 800–1100 mm wide.

Treat these as style-typical ranges, not fixed specs. For circulation, even a layered boho room needs paths: keep at least 750–900 mm of clear route through the seating so the relaxed clutter stays walkable and the rug layers don't become a trip hazard on the drawing.

How to layer a boho room from the set

Start with the rugs, not the furniture — boho is built from the floor up. Lay a large base rug, then overlap one or two smaller patterned rugs at angles; the overlap is the look. Place a low sofa or a cluster of floor cushions on the rug, add a rattan chair or two angled informally rather than squared, and float a low table in the middle within easy reach of every seat.

Ring the group with greenery: plant stands in corners, a tall potted plant beside the seating, hanging-plant symbols over the elevation. Keep it asymmetric on purpose — boho avoids the mirrored pairs that deco loves. Put plants, rugs and lanterns on their own layer so you can show a clean furniture plan and a fully layered one from the same drawing, and so the foliage doesn't clutter a technical plot.

Plan and elevation views

In plan you arrange the loose seating cluster and stack the rug outlines to plan the overlap, while checking the walking route stays clear. In elevation you show the cane and rattan weaves, the low table heights and the hanging plants and macramé that give boho its vertical texture. Many blocks ship both views in one DWG.

Elevation matters here because so much boho character is in the vertical layer — tall plants, hanging baskets, draped textiles. The elevation blocks carry sensible heights so a wall elevation reads as layered rather than flat.

Per-item notes

- Modular floor sofa: array the modules to length; keep the seat low so cushions and poufs sit comfortably alongside. - Peacock chair: wider than it looks in plan because of the flared back — give it clearance behind. - Floor poufs: scatter them as flexible seating; they double as footrests, so place a few near the sofa. - Layered rugs: insert several and overlap them at angles; the overlap is the styling, so don't align their edges. - Plant stands and pots: corners and beside seating; keep them on the greenery layer. - Hanging-plant symbol: an elevation accent — place it on the wall elevation above the seating, not in the plan footprint.

Where the bohemian pack is used

Boho blocks suit relaxed residential and hospitality work: living rooms and reading nooks, cafés and juice bars, yoga and creative studios, boutique fashion retail, festival lounges and pop-up spaces. Combine them with the broader furniture, lighting and plant categories where you need more greenery or seating.

Because they are free and licence-clear, they fit concept plans, mood boards, competition boards and student interior briefs where you need credible relaxed furniture without licensing fuss. The same blocks run from an early concept to a coordinated FF&E drawing, so the layered scheme is drawn once and reused.

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Questions

Frequently asked

What makes a CAD block read as bohemian?+

Casual, low, textural pieces placed without a rigid grid — rattan and cane seating, floor cushions and poufs, low tables and overlapping rugs. This pack is drawn to support that layering, with rugs in several sizes meant to overlap and asymmetric seating rather than mirrored pairs.

Can I use these boho blocks on commercial jobs?+

Yes. Every block is free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, watermark or attribution, and is cleared for commercial use in cafés, studios, retail and residential work.

How do I plan overlapping rugs in CAD without it looking messy?+

Insert the rugs first and overlap them at slight angles on their own layer. Because the outlines are scaled, you can see the actual coverage and keep a clear walking route through the cluster — the controlled overlap is what makes boho look intentional rather than chaotic.

Do these files open in older AutoCAD and free viewers?+

Yes. The DWG files target AutoCAD 2004 and later and open in current AutoCAD, AutoCAD LT, BricsCAD, DraftSight and free DWG viewers such as Autodesk's online viewer.

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