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Flower Blue 6
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Flower Blue 6

Flower Blue 6

A gift for a speech therapist works best when it skips the follow-up conversation about care instructions, and Flower Blue 6 was named on a day the studio was moving too fast to overthink it. The number shares its name with a food dye that's colored soft drinks since the 1980s, though Blue 6 here is a glaze fired onto a ceramic flower, not a preservative fizzing in a can, and the flower turned out better than the naming logic behind it. Artisans shape each one by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, so the depth of blue shifts slightly depending on how the glaze pooled in the kiln. It rides a single hook indefinitely, requiring no water, no upkeep, no wilting deadline of any kind. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts keeps a short run of Chive pieces in its gift shop, Flower Blue 6 included, nowhere near the soda aisle its name accidentally references.

$14.44

Original: $41.25

-65%
Flower Blue 6

$41.25

$14.44

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Flower Blue 6

A gift for a speech therapist works best when it skips the follow-up conversation about care instructions, and Flower Blue 6 was named on a day the studio was moving too fast to overthink it. The number shares its name with a food dye that's colored soft drinks since the 1980s, though Blue 6 here is a glaze fired onto a ceramic flower, not a preservative fizzing in a can, and the flower turned out better than the naming logic behind it. Artisans shape each one by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, so the depth of blue shifts slightly depending on how the glaze pooled in the kiln. It rides a single hook indefinitely, requiring no water, no upkeep, no wilting deadline of any kind. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts keeps a short run of Chive pieces in its gift shop, Flower Blue 6 included, nowhere near the soda aisle its name accidentally references.

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A gift for a speech therapist works best when it skips the follow-up conversation about care instructions, and Flower Blue 6 was named on a day the studio was moving too fast to overthink it. The number shares its name with a food dye that's colored soft drinks since the 1980s, though Blue 6 here is a glaze fired onto a ceramic flower, not a preservative fizzing in a can, and the flower turned out better than the naming logic behind it. Artisans shape each one by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, so the depth of blue shifts slightly depending on how the glaze pooled in the kiln. It rides a single hook indefinitely, requiring no water, no upkeep, no wilting deadline of any kind. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts keeps a short run of Chive pieces in its gift shop, Flower Blue 6 included, nowhere near the soda aisle its name accidentally references.