
Flower arranging gets credit for being meditative and creative, but for most people, it’s actually a bit of a guessing game. Stems slide around, flowers lean in unexpected directions, and what started as a simple bouquet ends up looking haphazard, no matter how much you fiddle. Most vases don’t help much; they hold the water, hold the stems, and leave the rest up to you.
That’s the problem that Rila, a 2026 vase by London- and Düsseldorf-based studio nikola & florian, quietly tries to solve. Rather than leaving every stem to fend for itself, the design adds structure that guides flowers into place without forcing them into any fixed arrangement. The idea isn’t to make flower arranging feel like a chore but to let it happen almost on its own.
Designer: Nikola Gaytandjiev and Florian Neubacher (nikola & florian)


The vase consists of two separate pieces: a frosted glass vessel that holds water, and a clear glass structure that sits right inside. The structure has a net-like form, with arched glass rods that gently space and guide each stem as it passes through, without locking anything into place. The two pieces lift apart, which makes the whole thing simple to clean.

Both parts are made from borosilicate glass, chosen for its strength and optical clarity. What makes the pairing interesting is the contrast between them: the frosted vessel has a soft, muted look and a slightly tactile surface, while the clear structure above lets light pass straight through. That interplay of opacity and transparency gives the object a quiet visual richness that most flower holders don’t have.

In practice, using Rila feels less like a task and more like something you’ll stop thinking about. Drop a few stems through the lattice, and each one finds the angle it naturally wants. You don’t end up with a perfectly symmetrical arrangement, and that’s kind of the point. The flowers get room to look like themselves, with the structure providing just enough order.

Rila comes in a handful of colorways, with matching tones running through both the frosted vessel and the clear structure. Blue, green, amber, and white are among the available options, each creating a slightly different mood without changing the fundamental character of the piece. The frosted base absorbs and deepens whatever color it carries, while the transparent structure stays open and light, keeping things airy.

What makes Rila particularly easy to live with is that it earns its place in a room even on days when there aren’t any flowers in it. The frosted vessel and clear glass structure together form an object with enough sculptural character to hold attention on its own. You’d place it on a side table the same way you’d display any other piece you genuinely liked.
