Collection: Vases

A vase is rarely the first thing people notice in a room, but it's often the detail that makes an arrangement feel complete. This collection includes decorative floor vases and table vases for homes, offices, and commercial interiors across Pakistan.

Why Vases Matter More Than People Expect

Most people don't shop for a vase until they actually need one.

A dining table feels unfinished. A console looks a little too empty. A corner needs some height. A reception counter needs something decorative, but nothing too loud. That's usually where the search starts.

Here's the interesting part — a vase rarely ends up being the centrepiece on its own. Its real job is to make flowers, decorative stems, branches, or the furniture around it look more considered. Get it right, and the vase doesn't compete with the room. It just quietly holds everything else together.

Floor Vases and Table Vases Do Different Jobs

It's easy to assume all vases work the same way. They don't.

Floor Vases

Floor vases are built to work at room scale.

You'll find them beside sofas, entrances, staircases, reception desks, and larger walls — anywhere a smaller piece would just disappear. A lot of customers use them with decorative branches or artificial stems, though plenty just let the vase stand on its own. Either way, a good floor vase adds height and presence without needing any extra furniture to back it up.

Table Vases

Table vases work much closer to where people actually sit, work, and interact.

Think dining tables, coffee tables, office desks, shelves, reception counters, side tables. Their role is quieter — they're not there to define a room, just to finish off the smaller areas within it.

Both do the same fundamental job. They just do it at different scales.

Choosing the Right Vase for the Space

The best vase isn't necessarily the most decorative one on the shelf. It's the one that actually fits the space it's going into.

A large hotel lobby, an office reception, or a spacious living room can usually carry a substantial floor vase without any trouble. A smaller apartment, a desk, or a shelf is often better served by something quieter and more compact.

Same rule as with planters, really — scale matters more than most people expect. Too small, and the vase disappears into the room. Too large, and it takes it over.

Where Most People Place a Vase

One thing we've noticed is that vases often work best where the eye naturally comes to rest — a dining table, a console table near an entrance, a reception counter, or an empty corner beside a seating area. The vase doesn't need to dominate the room. It just needs to give that part of the space a purpose.

On Its Own, or Part of an Arrangement? 

Some customers want a vase to hold flowers or decorative stems. Others pick one purely because the vase itself brings enough visual interest on its own.

Both work fine. A well-designed vase should hold its own whether it's full of an arrangement or standing empty — which is exactly why decorative vases stay popular in homes, offices, restaurants, hotels, and retail spaces. You get the flexibility to change what's inside it over time, while the vase itself keeps doing its job in the room.

Vase or Planter?

Customers sometimes hesitate between a decorative vase and a planter. The difference usually comes down to whether the display is built around greenery or around the arrangement itself. Planters are designed to support plants. Vases are designed to support decorative stems, flowers, branches, or stand alone as decorative pieces.

Who Buys Decorative Vases?

Homeowners tend to reach for vases to finish off living rooms, dining areas, hallways, and entrances. Interior designers use them to bring height, texture, and balance into a room. Businesses place them in reception areas, meeting rooms, restaurants, showrooms, and hospitality spaces where every decorative detail plays a small part in the overall feel of the place.

The reason shifts from project to project, but the goal's usually the same — a space that feels considered, not just furnished.

Looking Ahead

Right now, our vase collection covers floor vases and table vases, with more styles, finishes, and decorative designs planned as the collection grows.

Rather than chasing every trend, the focus stays on pieces that hold up in real homes, workplaces, and commercial interiors — the kind of thing people are still using long after the rest of the decorating is done.