5 handy tips to help you decorate a buffet without the guessing game.
Remember Betty White? Not the person, but the buffet we refinished and affectionately named “Betty White” a few weeks ago. I left the top empty for a while because I wasn’t sure how to style it without covering up the large, collected antique mirror wall behind it.


After living at home for what felt like forever, I finally spent some time thinking about the buffet top and styled it in a way that complements the mirror wall rather than obscuring it.

I shopped online for a long time until I found a blue-and-white vase that hit the balance between traditional and rustic and tied into the other blue accents in the dining room. Once that piece arrived, the entire arrangement fell into place.
If you’re unsure how to style a buffet, here are five practical rules I use every time. They make the process easy and predictable while still allowing for personality.
1. Start with your tallest item
Choose the tallest piece first—usually a vase, lamp, or sculpture. Placing a tall item anchors the composition and gives you a starting point for the rest of the objects. I like to position my tallest piece slightly off-center, toward one end, rather than dead center. That asymmetry feels more relaxed and layered.

2. Create visual triangles
When you arrange items, aim for triangular compositions. The eye naturally follows triangular lines, so placing objects to form a triangle keeps the grouping balanced and pleasing. You don’t need to measure anything—just note how the tallest, medium, and smallest pieces relate to one another and tweak until the arrangement reads like a triangle.

3. Stick to the rule of three
Group items in threes. Small clusters of three objects read as intentional and cohesive. On this buffet I created three groups: the blue-and-white vase paired with a small black bowl on one end; a pair of jugs and a strand of wooden beads on the other; and a wooden bowl set on a stack of books in the center. Those three groupings keep the top looking balanced without feeling cluttered.

4. Always have at least one fresh element
Fresh foliage, flowers, or a living plant adds life to any display. A small bouquet, a few stems in a vase, or even a bowl with moss introduces color, texture, and a sense of freshness that makes the arrangement feel lived-in and welcoming. It’s an easy way to avoid a static or overly staged look.

5. Vary your textures
Mix several different materials—glass, ceramic, wood, stone, paper, metal, woven fibers—to create depth and interest. In this setup I used ceramic vases, wooden beads and a bowl, a stack of paper-covered books, and a dark stone bowl. Keeping most of the palette neutral creates an earthy baseline, while a single patterned or colorful piece, like the blue-and-white vase, serves as the focal point.

That’s it—five simple, repeatable rules to help you style a buffet top that looks deliberate and beautiful. These principles work for mantels, console tables, and other surfaces too. Next time you find yourself stuck, use the tallest item, form triangles, group objects by three, add something fresh, and mix textures. Small adjustments will make a big difference.
