Choosing the Right Floor-Standing Food Display: Inclino vs Silvestro vs Celsius vs Market 600
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Four floor-standing units, four different jobs. Picking between them comes down to how the product is shaped, how much floor space you can give it, and whether the display needs to move around the shop with the seasons. Here's how they actually differ.
- Floor Display Unit – Inclino — from €134.90
- Floor Display Unit – Silvestro — from €104.90
- Food Display Unit – Celsius — from €119.90
- Food Display Unit – Market 600 — from €139.90
Inclino: angled for shelf-edge visibility
The Inclino uses an angled, tiered layout, which means every row of product tilts slightly toward the customer instead of lying flat. That's the same principle wine retailers use to catch light on a label — it works just as well for packaged food, giving each row its own clear sightline rather than the front row hiding everything behind it.
Silvestro: the compact, budget-friendly option
The Silvestro is the smallest footprint of the four and the lowest cost, which makes it the natural choice for a secondary or seasonal spot rather than a main display — a promotional end-point, a till-adjacent stand, or a trial position before committing floor space to a bigger unit.
Celsius: a defined, boxed presentation
The Celsius gives product a more contained, boxed presentation rather than open tiers, which suits packaged goods that benefit from a defined "frame" — it reads less like open shelving and more like a dedicated feature unit, useful when you want one product range to stand apart from the rest of the floor.
Market 600: width for volume
The Market 600 is built for a wider spread of stock at once, which suits shops that want a genuine "market stall" impression rather than a narrow single-product stand — see our Market range guide for how to build that look properly.
How to actually choose
As a rule: pick Inclino when shelf-edge visibility on packaged product matters most, Silvestro when budget or footprint is tight, Celsius when one range needs to be visually separated from the rest of the shop, and Market 600 when you want width and volume over a tight, curated spot. Retail display research consistently finds that a fixture's job is to increase how often a product is actually seen and picked up, not just to hold stock — POPAI's research put the effect at roughly 1 in 6 in-store brand purchases happening specifically because the product was on a proper display rather than a bare shelf.
Frequently asked questions
Which floor display suits a small shop floor?
The Silvestro has the smallest footprint of the four and is the most budget-friendly, making it well suited to a secondary spot or a smaller shop floor.
What's the difference between Inclino and Celsius?
Inclino uses angled, tiered shelving for shelf-edge visibility on packaged goods; Celsius gives product a more boxed, contained presentation that separates one range visually from the rest of the floor.
Which unit suits a market-stall look?
The Market 600 is built wider, for a fuller spread of stock, and pairs well with our Market 400 and Market 45.8×163×30cm stands for a full farmers'-market feel.
Browse the range: Food & Beverage Displays. Not sure which fits your floor plan? Get in touch.