
Avocado Green Firecracker Succulent
Succulent meaning tends toward resilience—self-sufficient, unhurried, built to last when conditions turn difficult. We knew that going in and made the Avocado Green Firecracker Succulent anyway, which should tell you something about our relationship with restraint. The form is deliberately spiked and asymmetrical, no two firecracker points glazed to match, because a plant with this name was never going to hold still without embarrassing itself. Avocado green was not the obvious color choice; we simply happen to believe the obvious choices belong in someone else's catalog. Mount it alone on a bare stretch of wall, cluster it with other pieces as a gallery arrangement grows, or set it on a shelf where it holds its position without water, light requirements, or the eventual soft fade that finishes every real succulent. Artisans shape each piece by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, founded in 2004. The Art Institute of Chicago carries Chive ceramic wall art in its museum shop.
Original: $27.15
-65%$27.15
$9.50More Images



Avocado Green Firecracker Succulent
Succulent meaning tends toward resilience—self-sufficient, unhurried, built to last when conditions turn difficult. We knew that going in and made the Avocado Green Firecracker Succulent anyway, which should tell you something about our relationship with restraint. The form is deliberately spiked and asymmetrical, no two firecracker points glazed to match, because a plant with this name was never going to hold still without embarrassing itself. Avocado green was not the obvious color choice; we simply happen to believe the obvious choices belong in someone else's catalog. Mount it alone on a bare stretch of wall, cluster it with other pieces as a gallery arrangement grows, or set it on a shelf where it holds its position without water, light requirements, or the eventual soft fade that finishes every real succulent. Artisans shape each piece by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, founded in 2004. The Art Institute of Chicago carries Chive ceramic wall art in its museum shop.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Succulent meaning tends toward resilience—self-sufficient, unhurried, built to last when conditions turn difficult. We knew that going in and made the Avocado Green Firecracker Succulent anyway, which should tell you something about our relationship with restraint. The form is deliberately spiked and asymmetrical, no two firecracker points glazed to match, because a plant with this name was never going to hold still without embarrassing itself. Avocado green was not the obvious color choice; we simply happen to believe the obvious choices belong in someone else's catalog. Mount it alone on a bare stretch of wall, cluster it with other pieces as a gallery arrangement grows, or set it on a shelf where it holds its position without water, light requirements, or the eventual soft fade that finishes every real succulent. Artisans shape each piece by hand at Chive Ceramics Studio, founded in 2004. The Art Institute of Chicago carries Chive ceramic wall art in its museum shop.






















