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The Green Collection: Nature in Clay

A Color Journey in Three Dimensions

Green is the color of renewal: the first leaf after rain, the mineral seam inside a mountain, the ocean when the wind changes. It is a living spectrum—quiet sage, deep forest, sea-glass—and it settles into the home with a rare kind of poise. The Green Collection at Trove Gallery gathers this spectrum across mediums—green ceramics, green pottery, glass, stone, and wood—so you can bring the pulse of nature indoors without losing an ounce of sophistication.

In this Color Journey, we lean into the tactile: the way a glaze pools in a carved motif, the way polished onyx holds light, the way a glass lip catches a dusk glow. Each piece is handcrafted by a maker whose voice is unmistakable, and each one tells a story of place—coastlines, groves, quarries—rendered in shades of green. From intimate vessels to sculptural furniture, this is a collection to live with, not just look at.

If you are drawn to green ceramics and green pottery, you’ll find pieces here that feel both timeless and new—objects with the quiet confidence of heirlooms and the clarity of contemporary design.

Green, From Earth to Fire: Ceramics that Hold the Landscape

Some greens feel discovered rather than applied. The Distressed Sardinia Vessel by Àlvar Martínez Mestres (USD $732.00) exemplifies that sensation. Its surface suggests years of weather and salt, yet it’s the product of an artist’s deliberate hand. The vessel’s earthy body and mottled green tones create a sense of archaeological presence—a fragment of coastline, distilled. Place it on a console or open shelf and watch your room take on the calm weight of history.

Green can also play to myth and movement. Ceramic artist Melina Xenaki channels ancient animal iconography into striking forms that feel remarkably modern. Her Green Bird, Bull and Horse Vase (USD $699.00) celebrates motion—a procession of creatures circling the pot, hand-marked and rhythmic. The White Ibex Vase (USD $963.00) and Distressed Ibex Vase (USD $963.00) refine the theme with a single, powerful symbol rendered in contrasting surfaces: one luminous and pale, the other quietly rugged. For a more textural study, the Green Patterned Crater Vase (USD $566.00) brings green to life through relief—its patterned wall catching light like terraced hills after rain.

Where some ceramics hum with narrative, others arrive as pure architecture. The Le Sud Serie Vase by Olivia Cognet (USD $2,023.00) is poised in that architectonic register: sculptural, refined, and steeped in sun-washed geometry. In a space that craves a calm statement, it provides one—minimal yet resonant, with green that reads like a warm shadow on sand. Imagine it beside a linen-curtained window, a single stem allowing the form to hold the room.

Together, these green ceramics teach us a lesson in balance: how to combine narrative and form, ornateness and restraint, in one compositional palette. They are unmistakably contemporary, yet rooted in the oldest collaboration we know—earth and fire.

The Architecture of Light: Moser’s Caorle in Verdant Tones

Green doesn’t only belong to clay. In glass, it becomes a study in light—dilated, refracted, alive. Moser’s Caorle series anchors this truth with sculptural clarity. The trio of vases offers a graduated scale for nuanced styling: the Short Caorle Vase (USD $1,045.00), the Medium Caorle Vase (USD $4,792.00), and the commanding Tall Caorle Vase (USD $8,381.00). Each profile reads like a carved shoreline—clean planes, decisive edges, a green that seems to glow from within. Cluster the short and medium for a quiet duet on a mantel, or let the tall stand alone on a console, where its height can draw the eye and lift the room.

The bowls invite a different rhythm, where objects and emptiness share the stage. The Small Caorle Bowl (USD $8,381.00) is a gem-like accent on a bedside or vanity, while the Medium Caorle Bowl (USD $2,233.00) excels at corralling daily essentials—keys, matches, a favorite ring—without breaking the quiet. For a dining room or entry table, the sculptural sweep of the Large Caorle Bowl (USD $5,709.00) creates a focal point strong enough to anchor the entire space. Moser’s green here feels like deep water at noon: transparent yet saturated, serene yet dynamic.

When you pair Caorle glass with green pottery, the interplay is elegant—clay’s matte depth against glass’s luminous skin. A Green Patterned Crater Vase beside the Medium Caorle Bowl balances texture and light beautifully, each making the other more itself.

Stone, Wood, and the Deep Green Heart: Marbera’s Sculptural Furniture

Green as a hue and a feeling reaches its most elemental clarity in stone—geology captured at rest. Marbera’s studio works this material with modern grace, creating furniture that feels as much like sculpture as it does utility. Begin with the totemic duo: the Gaia Vase (USD $1,204.00) and the Gaia Table (USD $3,156.00). The names say it all; each piece is an ode to the earth, with a green tone that shifts as light moves across its surface. The vase brings quiet monumentality to an entry or dining table, while the table is a jewel-box pedestal for books, a tea set, or a single stem in a favorite vessel.

Marbera’s onyx stools are chiseled poems to the color green. The Gabi Onyx Stool (USD $2,933.00) presents a compact silhouette with veining that reads like a topographic map; the Dolce Onyx Stool (USD $4,056.00) offers a slightly more opulent line and a deeper green that feels like a shaded grove; and the Oggi Onyx Stool (USD $3,918.00) strikes a balance—graphic, modern, and astonishingly versatile. Use one as a side table beside a reading chair, or pair two as low pedestals to stage ceramics like the Distressed Sardinia Vessel.

Green extends into wood through tone and contrast. The Rosie Table (USD $2,166.00) introduces a refined counterpoint—warm wood that frames green objects with tenderness. For layered storage and display, the Amo Burl Wood Storage Table (USD $2,599.00) is a conversation piece on its own: the swirling figure of burl offers rich, organic patterning that harmonizes beautifully with green decor. And when a room calls for a sculptural accent with coastal ease, the Alfie Shell Onyx Stool (USD $3,058.00) delivers—a pale shell-toned partner that makes any green vessel look deeper and more intentional by contrast.

With Marbera, form is serene but never static. These pieces invite touch and slow the eye. Together with green ceramics and glass, they form an ecosystem—a room that breathes.

A Glow at Dusk: Gilles Caffier’s Shagreen Votive

Texture transforms light. The Shagreen Votive by GILLES CAFFIER (USD $213.00) translates the tactile allure of shagreen into a candleholder that gives evening light a new language. Its scaled surface breaks glow into a delicate shimmer—exactly the kind of detail that turns a vignette into an experience. Place it near a Short Caorle Vase or the Le Sud Serie Vase and watch green deepens as the flame finds the contours. One votive is a subtle note; two or three gathered along a table reads as an intimate ritual.

Art on the Wall, Echoes in Green: Marcela Cure

Green in a home is not just an accent; it’s a rhythm. Artist Marcela Cure’s Echoe Green (USD $3,360.00) gives that rhythm a vertical frame—an artwork where the color unfurls in layered tones, inviting the eye to rest and wander. Hang it where daylight shifts—above a sideboard with the Large Caorle Bowl, or opposite a window so the greens in your ceramics, glass, and stone will echo the greens on the wall. The piece anchors the entire collection with painterly finesse, pulling ceramics, furniture, and objects into conversation.

Styling the Green Collection at Home

Begin with a color intention. Do you want the hushed greens of a forest floor or the crystalline greens of coastal glass? If you prefer softness, pair the Distressed Sardinia Vessel with the Green Patterned Crater Vase by Melina Xenaki for an earthy duet—mattes, reliefs, and gentle tonal shifts. For a brighter, light-forward palette, choose the Medium Caorle Vase and Medium Caorle Bowl by Moser, where transparency carries the color like water.

Work with height and negative space. A tall moment—like the Tall Caorle Vase (USD $8,381.00) or the totemic Gaia Vase (USD $1,204.00)—draws the eye upward and sets the visual tempo. Mid-height vessels like the Green Bird, Bull and Horse Vase (USD $699.00) provide narrative at the center of the composition, while smaller pieces (the Small Caorle Bowl, USD $8,381.00) tuck into corners and edges to keep the arrangement feeling human and lived-in.

Let materials converse. A Marbera onyx stool as pedestal—try the Gabi Onyx Stool—introduces subtle veining that harmonizes with ceramic glaze variations. On a wooden surface like the Amo Burl Wood Storage Table, ceramics appear especially luminous; the wood’s warmth draws out the cool depth of green. On a stone table such as the Gaia Table or the airy Rosie Table, a single sculptural vase like the Le Sud Serie Vase can hold the entire scene.

Compose with light. Evening is when green deepens and edges blur. Add the Shagreen Votive to a console of mixed heights—the Distressed Ibex Vase, the White Ibex Vase, and the Short Caorle Vase—and notice how flame reveals every stroke and plane. If you’ve hung Echoe Green nearby, the whole palette hums in unison.

Caring for handcrafted pieces is simple. Dust gently with a soft cloth; avoid prolonged direct sunlight on deeply colored glass and artwork; and place felt pads under heavier stone pieces like the Dolce Onyx Stool or Oggi Onyx Stool to protect floors and surfaces. For ceramics, a dry microfiber cloth preserves the quiet sheen of your glazes; for glass, a lint-free cloth keeps the green lucid.

Meet the Makers

Marbera approaches stone and wood with sculptural restraint, finding modern forms inside ancient materials. Explore the full studio collection at Trove x Marbera. Their Gaia Vase, Gaia Table, and onyx stools—Gabi, Dolce, Oggi—showcase that signature balance of clarity and presence, while the Rosie Table, Alfie Shell Onyx Stool, and Amo Burl Wood Storage Table expand the palette with warmth and nuance.

Melina Xenaki’s vessels feel as if they were unearthed and reimagined—ancient motifs translated through a contemporary hand. Her green pottery—Green Bird, Bull and Horse Vase, White Ibex Vase, Distressed Ibex Vase, and Green Patterned Crater Vase—reveals just how expressive a single color can be. See more at Trove x Melina Xenaki.

Marcela Cure brings color into focus with a painter’s ear for rhythm. Echoe Green distills the hue into a contemplative, room-shaping work of art. Explore the artist at Trove x Marcela Cure.

GILLES CAFFIER transforms surface into story. The Shagreen Votive shows how a single texture can change a room’s mood—especially when paired with green vessels. Discover more at Trove x GILLES CAFFIER.

Moser’s Caorle series proves that green, in glass, is a form of architecture. Explore vases and bowls—from the Short Caorle Vase to the Large Caorle Bowl—at Trove x Moser.

Olivia Cognet sculpts light and shadow into ceramics that feel both elemental and elegantly composed. The Le Sud Serie Vase is as versatile as it is iconic. Visit Trove x Olivia Cognet for the full view.

A Living Palette—Build Your Own Green Story

The Green Collection is an invitation to curate a living palette—objects that change with light and season, pieces that accrue memory. Whether you start small with a single vessel or compose a room with stone, glass, and green pottery, you’re building a quiet kind of luxury: authentic, tactile, enduring.

Bring the hue home now. Explore the full selection of green ceramics, green pottery, glass, stone, and wood. Begin with the piece that moves you—perhaps the Distressed Sardinia Vessel or the Medium Caorle Vase—then return as the story grows. Shop the makers, meet the materials, and let your rooms breathe in green.