Nothing says 'Dwarfy' like a heavy stone mug embedded with face-shredding crystals.
...which has somehow been filled with lye. And is on fire.
Edit: Side remark
I'd recommend you not to use bins at all initially, and then only add them in slow measured steps, and preferably only after gaining the knowledge of when you can use them without too much trouble.
But to gain knowledge of when a Bin causes trouble, I need to encounter those troubles
I recommend a stockpile which can have bins, but not enough to fill the stockpile. Bins are great for two purposes:
1. They carry a lot of things in a hurry to the traders depot in the event of a caravan.
2. If there are a lot (and I mean more than 50) items in a large (at least 4x4) stockpile, they can be useful in storing things.
But the use of bins will turn around and bite you, as only one dwarf can access any one bin at a time, and some dwarves will take a huge amount of time "accessing" a bin. For example, by walking up from the forges 100z levels below, grabbing something for the bin, walking another 50z, putting the item in the bin, and all the time, from the moment they decided to use the bin, it seems that the bin is "reserved" and every item in it "missing" until that dwarf finishes that action.
Also, large wide binless stockpiles are surprisingly pretty. My metal ingot stockpile, with the binned ingot stockpile above it:
Personally, I love using bins. But I don't use them near my jewellers, for a different reason: My jewellers are surrounded by fancy furniture and fancy finished goods (there's no reason to encrust a
-mudstone mug- with gemstones when I could encrust a
☼marble mug☼) and I usually have a spare smith there. The smithery can plate things with gold and silver, but it doesn't have a handy dandy "only do it to these items" system like the jewellers shops do. So I try to keep bins out of the vicinity of the gold plating workshop, as otherwise I get bins with
☼gold spikes☼,
☼silver bands☼ and
☼platinum images of cheese☼ all over them, which annoys me.