Farveladeland
Andre skåle
8 items
This is the category for the bowls that don't fit in line with the others. Stoneware bowls with thick blue glaze — big enough for both salad and fruit. Purple glass bowls with a heavy foot that sits still on a dinner table. Pine bowls with visible grain we dragged home from a French flea market. Chrome fruit bowls from the 70s. Italian woven baskets. Arcoroc pressed-glass comports — perfect for cake, fruit or a stack of macarons next to the coffee.
FAQ
Questions we get often.
Yes. We only buy lamps we can vouch for ourselves — most often directly from Italian flea markets, estates or distributors in northern Italy. When a lamp has a signature or a known provenance, we note it in the listing.
About this collection
Vintage bowls and dishes — the unusual one-offs
We rarely have more than one of each. Once a bowl is sold, it usually doesn't come back. On the other hand, there's always something new coming in — we drive down to France four or five times a year, and the rest turn up in the Danish flea-market finds we make locally in Frederiksberg and around Copenhagen.
The bowls are second-hand and carry traces of a life before ours. Light wear, small chips or a patinated rim is part of the charm — and part of why the price is what it is. We always check for cracks that would make a bowl unfit for food or flowers, and we'll write clearly on the product page if there's anything to be aware of.
Good to know
- Stoneware bowls with blue glaze in several sizes — good for serving
- Glass comports and chrome fruit bowls from the 60s and 70s
- Pine bowls and woven baskets — warm materials for a neutral interior
- Rare one-offs that won't come back once they're sold
- Brought home from France four to five times a year — the rest are local Danish finds















