Collection: Accessories

It’s the quiet details that make a space feel complete. We curate accessories for substance and craftsmanship: hand-cast metal, honed stone, refined woods, leather accents, and lacquered finishes. Mix heights and textures—place a sculpture for lift, use trays to ground vignettes, and add boxes for concealed storage with character.

Accessories

With so many choices, here are some suggestions... if you have to choose.

How to Choose

  • Start with purpose.
    Trays corral and define; bowls invite touch; boxes add hidden storage; sculptures supply height and focal points. One function per surface keeps it calm.

  • Match scale to the surface.
    Coffee table tray ≈ ½–⅔ the table’s shortest dimension.
    Console anchors: one tall piece (24–32″) + one low/wide piece.
    Bookshelf objects: fill 60–70% of each cubby; leave air.

  • Mind height and sightlines.
    Keep pieces below 10–12″ on coffee tables so conversation stays clear; go taller at consoles where you view from a distance.

  • Materials with intention.
    Mix one matte + one sheen + one natural (e.g., honed stone + patinated brass + wood). Repeats create rhythm; too many finishes read busy.

  • Color as a quiet echo.
    Pull one hue from art/textiles; repeat it 2–3 times across the room in different materials (glass, leather, lacquer).

  • Edit by weight.
    Heavy materials (stone, metal) need fewer pieces; lighter (ceramic, rattan) can layer more. Aim for odd-number groupings (3 or 5).

  • Texture = temperature.
    Smooth + woven + carved beats three glossy items in a row. Patina is welcome—character ages beautifully.

  • Proportion trumps theme.
    Figurines/objects work when scale and finish suit the surface—even if the subject is eclectic.

How to Place

  • Coffee Table
    Tray as “stage,” a low bowl + small stack of books + one lift (floral/branch or small sculpture). Leave 8–10″ of clear perimeter.

  • Console / Sideboard
    Compose a triangle: tall lamp or sculpture, mid-height vase, long tray/box. Keep the tallest piece off-center for movement.

  • Bookshelves
    Alternate vertical and horizontal lines: books upright, then a stack with a box on top, then an object in negative space. Leave 20–30% breathing room per shelf.

  • Bedside
    Tray for nightly essentials, a lidded box for the rest, and one soft silhouette (stone, linen, ceramic). Height stays below the lamp’s shade.

  • Dining / Island
    One substantial centerpiece (stone bowl, long tray). Daily life? Slide it aside—choose pieces that look good “parked.”

Quality Cues (what to look for)

  • True weight and balance; no rocking bases.
  • Clean seams and miters; consistent finish on metal and lacquer.
  • Felt or leather bottoms that protect surfaces.
  • Bowls/trays with useful depth (≥1.5–2″) so they function, not just decorate.

Styling Formulas (plug-and-play)

  • The 3-Piece Vignette: vertical (lamp/branch) + horizontal (tray/books) + sculptural (object).
  • Material Trio: wood + metal + ceramic.
  • Tone Trio: your wall color (darker/lighter) + a neutral + one accent from art.

Edit Checklist (before you walk away)

  • Remove one item per surface—then check balance.
  • Can you clean the surface in one move? If not, simplify.
  • Do pieces earn their keep (function, memory, or beauty)? Keep only “yes.”

Care & Longevity

  • Dust with microfiber; avoid harsh polishes on patinated metals.
  • Use felt pads on heavy bowls/trays; rotate pieces seasonally to prevent sun ghosting.
  • Stone/wood: wipe spills quickly; periodic oil/wax per maker guidance.