Wall decor has a new drama queen—and she’s hungry. With her latest limited edition wall print, “Out of Snacks”, French artist Cha adds a new slice of chaos to her cheeky Soft Pop Studio™ collection. Combining 60s comic strip aesthetics with 2020s emotional exhaustion, this new piece is more than just eye candy for your walls—it’s a mirror for modern life, laced with pastel angst and irony.
Crying in Pop Colors: A Closer Look at “Out of Snacks”
Tears, lashes, and longing. In Out of Snacks, a blonde bombshell stares into the void, devastated by the ultimate betrayal: the empty snack drawer. With her perfectly manicured nails and vintage eyeliner wings, she’s part Lana Del Rey, part Roy Lichtenstein, and 100% Cha.
But don’t let the drama fool you. The humor is intentional—and it’s feminist. Like all Soft Pop Studio™ wall prints, this poster is a playful critique of everyday pressure, consumption culture, and that impossible expectation of being cute and composed, even when life (or the fridge) falls apart.

The Art of Laughing at Ourselves
From “Out of Edibles” and its trippy gummy bear background to “I May Have to Find a Real Job”, which captures that financially induced identity crisis mid-phone call, Cha has built a universe of relatable heroines. They’re glamorous, yes—but also anxious, exhausted, impulsive, and refreshingly human.
Each artwork turns a familiar female meltdown into an empowering moment. These wall prints don’t ask you to fix your life. They tell you you’re not alone in the mess. They look amazing above your couch, sure—but they also make you laugh (and maybe cry) a little when you walk by.
Pop Art With a Purpose
What sets Soft Pop Studio™ apart from the countless pop art-inspired wall posters flooding the internet is the depth behind the aesthetic. Cha’s work may look like comic book kitsch at first glance, but every line is intentional. The exaggerated emotions aren’t just dramatic—they’re symbolic of the emotional labor women carry daily.
This isn’t about reproducing nostalgia. It’s about using retro style as a vessel for modern narratives—narratives rooted in feminist humor, economic precarity, and unapologetic vulnerability. These limited edition prints aren’t just wall decor. They’re conversation starters.
Collect Them All, or Just the One That Screams “You”

Whether you relate to the snack-deprived diva, the overspender on a landline (“Wait… I Spent How Much?”), or the unemployed queen trying to hold it together, there’s a Cha print for your mood (and your living room). Each piece is available in 7 sizes, printed on demand in limited edition of 300—not mass-produced, not soulless. Just like your emotions, they’re real and rare.
Final Thoughts: Empowerment, One Print at a Time
Cha’s latest release is a reminder that feminist art doesn’t always need to shout—it can cry with mascara running, mid-bite, while scrolling delivery apps. And in a world where so much decor feels generic, Soft Pop Studio™ offers something more: wall art that looks good and feels true.