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Custom Home Art
May 31, 2026

How to Style a Centerpiece Bowl

A centerpiece bowl is one of the most quietly powerful objects in a home. Empty, it reads as sculpture; filled, it earns its keep. The difference between a bowl that looks placed and one that looks styled comes down to a few simple decisions — scale, setting, and whether to fill it at all. Here's how to get it right, with a handmade piece doing the work in three different rooms.

Green handmade ceramic centerpiece bowl filled with figs and grapes on a linen-set dining table
Green handmade ceramic centerpiece bowl filled with figs and grapes on a linen-set dining table

On the dining table

The dining table is the centerpiece bowl's natural home. Anchor it on a runner or a folded linen to give it a base, and keep the scale generous — a piece around 25–35 cm across holds the centre of a table without crowding place settings.

Fill it loosely with seasonal fruit (figs, grapes, citrus, pears) so it feels abundant rather than arranged. The trick is restraint everywhere else: one beautiful bowl, a sprig of greenery, and room to breathe reads as considered; a cluttered table reads as busy.

Featured: Large Bowl “Green Bloom”

Turquoise matte ceramic bowl styled on a modern coffee table with design books and a linen sofa

As a living-room piece

On a coffee table, a centerpiece bowl works best left empty — here the form and glaze are the whole point. Pair it with a low stack of books to give it a plinth and vary the heights, and let a strong colour do the talking against a neutral sofa.

Keep the surface around it sparse: in a living room, a single sculptural bowl is worth more than a tray of small objects.

Featured: Large Bowl “Matte”

Violet reactive-glaze ceramic bowl as a statement piece on an entryway console table beside a lamp

On a console or in the entryway

An entryway console is where a bowl can be both beautiful and useful — a landing spot for keys and post, or simply a sculptural welcome. A reactive glaze catches lamplight and gives a hallway a focal point.

Set it slightly off-centre, balanced by a leaning artwork or a lamp, so the vignette feels collected rather than symmetrical.

Featured: Large Bowl “Volcano”

Three rules of thumb

  • Scale up. A centerpiece should feel deliberate. When in doubt, go larger — a too-small bowl disappears.
  • Fill it, or commit to empty. Half-filled looks accidental. Either heap it generously or leave it clean as an object.
  • Let it lead. One characterful, handmade bowl needs space around it. Negative space is what makes a piece look styled rather than stored.

Every bowl above is handmade, so each is one of a kind — the glaze pools and the rim falls a little differently on every piece, which is exactly what makes them feel collected. Browse the full collection of large & decorative bowls →

Styling images are illustrative and feature the actual product; because each piece is handmade, yours will vary slightly.

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How to Style a Centerpiece Bowl — A Practical Guide | Custom Home Art