
Robin's Egg Blue Keiko Peony
Peony flower meaning has always leaned toward honor and prosperity, and the Robin's Egg Blue Keiko Peony wears that meaning in a color that hasn't happened yet — the shade of early morning, of potential, of the moment right before you find out how things are going to go. Ceramic, hand-shaped, glazed in that particular blue, it carries the weight of a full peony bloom without asking anyone to keep it alive. The Keiko variety carries all of this without apparent effort, the way certain people deliver good news quietly, as if they'd always known. It hangs on a single screw, holds its shape and its meaning indefinitely, and never once drops a petal on the floor. One piece from this run sits in the desert-adjacent botanical collection at Desert Botanical Garden, and every piece has been shaped at Chive Ceramics Studio since 2004. The meaning stays. The upkeep does not.
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Robin's Egg Blue Keiko Peony
Peony flower meaning has always leaned toward honor and prosperity, and the Robin's Egg Blue Keiko Peony wears that meaning in a color that hasn't happened yet — the shade of early morning, of potential, of the moment right before you find out how things are going to go. Ceramic, hand-shaped, glazed in that particular blue, it carries the weight of a full peony bloom without asking anyone to keep it alive. The Keiko variety carries all of this without apparent effort, the way certain people deliver good news quietly, as if they'd always known. It hangs on a single screw, holds its shape and its meaning indefinitely, and never once drops a petal on the floor. One piece from this run sits in the desert-adjacent botanical collection at Desert Botanical Garden, and every piece has been shaped at Chive Ceramics Studio since 2004. The meaning stays. The upkeep does not.
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Peony flower meaning has always leaned toward honor and prosperity, and the Robin's Egg Blue Keiko Peony wears that meaning in a color that hasn't happened yet — the shade of early morning, of potential, of the moment right before you find out how things are going to go. Ceramic, hand-shaped, glazed in that particular blue, it carries the weight of a full peony bloom without asking anyone to keep it alive. The Keiko variety carries all of this without apparent effort, the way certain people deliver good news quietly, as if they'd always known. It hangs on a single screw, holds its shape and its meaning indefinitely, and never once drops a petal on the floor. One piece from this run sits in the desert-adjacent botanical collection at Desert Botanical Garden, and every piece has been shaped at Chive Ceramics Studio since 2004. The meaning stays. The upkeep does not.
























