Next's £55 ornate vase wins over shoppers with 'stunning' design and visitor compliments

Visitors have all noticed it and liked it
A customer describing how the £55 vase draws consistent compliments from people who visit her home.

In the quiet ritual of making a home feel like one's own, a £55 stoneware vase from Next has become, for many shoppers, something more than decoration — it has become a conversation. Standing 39 centimetres tall with an ornate floral design set against a glossy black ground, the Rockett St George piece has earned nineteen five-star reviews out of twenty, with buyers noting not just their own satisfaction but the unprompted admiration of their guests. It is a small reminder that objects chosen with care have a way of speaking on our behalf.

  • At £55, the vase sits at a price point that demands conviction — yet nearly every shopper who committed reports feeling immediately vindicated.
  • The piece has become a social object as much as a decorative one, with multiple reviewers noting that visitors ask about it without prompting.
  • Shoppers describe a pleasant surprise at the scale: the vase is genuinely large, and its generous proportions amplify rather than overwhelm its visual authority.
  • The sole recurring friction is physical — the vase is heavy and substantial, making placement a considered task rather than a casual one.
  • Cheaper alternatives exist across Amazon, Dunelm, and H&M, yet the consistency of praise around this piece suggests buyers feel they are purchasing something qualitatively apart.

At £55, Next's Rockett St George Black Large Floral Vase occupies the premium edge of everyday home décor — the kind of purchase that invites a pause before committing. Those who have made the leap appear almost unanimously satisfied. The stoneware piece, standing 39 centimetres tall and 34 centimetres wide, has gathered twenty customer reviews, nineteen of which are five stars. The lowest rating it has received is four.

What distinguishes the vase in the eyes of its owners is its social life. Shoppers describe it less as something they enjoy privately and more as something that draws comment from visitors. Reviewers named Susan, Linda, and Helena each noted that guests remarked on the piece unprompted — asking where it came from, calling it a talking point. The vase appears to function as a statement of taste, one that communicates something to others before its owner says a word.

Next positions the design as a meeting of modern and vintage sensibilities: a rich, glossy black base carrying an ornate botanical pattern in contrasting colours. The retailer suggests, with characteristic optimism, that it is the kind of object that might pass between generations. Buyers seem to agree in spirit, with one reviewer noting it looked far more expensive than its price, and another praising both the quality and the care taken in its packaging.

The one consistent caveat is practical rather than aesthetic. The vase is heavy and large, and several shoppers acknowledged that positioning it requires thought — it is not an object to move lightly around a room. For those weighing alternatives, options exist at lower price points from Amazon, Dunelm, and H&M. Yet the depth of feeling in these reviews suggests that shoppers who choose this piece feel they have acquired something that earns its place — not merely by sitting in a room, but by changing how the room feels to everyone who enters it.

At £55, Next's Rockett St George Black Large Floral Vase sits at the premium end of the home décor market—the kind of purchase that requires a moment of consideration before clicking buy. Yet shoppers who have taken that leap seem almost uniformly convinced they made the right choice. The vase, made entirely from stoneware and standing 39 centimeters tall with a width of 34 centimeters, has accumulated twenty customer reviews. Nineteen of them are five stars. The single four-star review represents the lowest rating the piece has received.

What emerges from these reviews is a consistent pattern: the vase works as a conversation starter. Shoppers describe it not merely as something they enjoy owning, but as something that draws comment from the people who enter their homes. One customer named Susan noted that visitors have all noticed it and liked it, while another Linda reported that guests who came to her house asked where she had purchased it. Helena, a third reviewer, called it a great talking point, saying it had been commented on by many visitors. The vase seems to function as more than decoration—it operates as a statement, a piece that announces something about the taste of the person who chose it.

Next's own description positions the object as a blend of registers: modern design meeting vintage sensibility. The piece features a rich, glossy black base that serves as a backdrop for an ornate floral pattern rendered in contrasting colors. According to the retailer, this interplay between the dark foundation and the detailed botanical imagery is what makes the design work. The company suggests, with the kind of optimism retailers often employ, that this is the sort of vase that might become a family heirloom, passed down across generations.

The reviews themselves reveal what actually resonates with buyers. One shopper said the vase looked far more expensive than its price tag suggested. Another praised the packaging, noting that the item arrived well-protected against breakage. Several mentioned surprise at the scale—the vase is genuinely large, and some customers admitted they had been uncertain about the size before purchasing but found that the generous proportions actually enhanced its impact as a statement piece. One reviewer described it as beyond her expectations in terms of quality, style, and presence.

There is, however, a caveat embedded in the praise. The weight and size that make the vase such a striking visual presence also present a practical challenge. Some shoppers noted that it is very heavy and quite big, which could complicate placement decisions or prove difficult for those with limited space or mobility concerns. This represents the only consistent criticism across the reviews—not a complaint about aesthetics or quality, but a straightforward acknowledgment that this is not a lightweight object to position and reposition around a room.

For those drawn to the piece but hesitant about the price, alternatives exist. Amazon offers a Large Black and Gold Floor Vase for £59.99, while Dunelm sells a Palm Leaf Ceramic Vase for £25. H&M has a Large Terracotta Vase priced at £34.99, designed to evoke the appearance of a soft bouquet wrap. Yet the sheer consistency of positive sentiment around Next's offering suggests that shoppers who commit to the higher price point feel they are receiving something distinct—an object that justifies its cost not through durability alone, but through the way it transforms a room and invites admiration from those who see it.

Looks far more expensive than it is. Elegant, beautiful vase. Visitors have all noticed it and liked it.
— Susan, customer review
It's one of my favourite pieces in my house. Others have come to my house and asked where I got it.
— Linda, customer review
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why do you think people keep mentioning that visitors comment on this vase? That's an unusual detail to emphasize in a home décor review.

Model

Because it validates the purchase in a way that matters to them. Buying something expensive for your own home is one thing. Having strangers walk in and immediately notice it—that's proof you made a good choice.

Inventor

But isn't that a bit superficial? Caring what guests think about your décor?

Model

Not really. It suggests the vase has genuine visual presence. It's not blending into the background. People aren't being polite—they're actually stopping to look at it.

Inventor

The weight keeps coming up as a problem. Does that undermine the whole thing?

Model

It complicates it, but doesn't undermine it. The weight is the price of having something substantial and real. It's not a light decorative object you can move around on a whim. You commit to where you put it.

Inventor

So the heaviness is actually part of what makes it feel valuable?

Model

Exactly. It feels permanent. It feels like something that belongs in a house, not something you picked up on impulse.

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