
Burnt Yellow Empire Cabbage Flower
Eclectic wall art earns its name by refusing to explain itself, and a Burnt Yellow Empire Cabbage Flower does exactly that from the name on down. This is not, by any measure, the prettiest name Chive has ever given a product — it sounds like something ordered off a menu without fully understanding it, only to arrive and turn out better than expected. Burnt yellow helps considerably, softening a shape that could otherwise read as strange into something that reads as deliberate. Ceramic holds that shape indefinitely, mounted with one screw, no soil, no wilting, no explaining to houseguests why a cabbage is on the wall. It's the kind of piece an eclectic room is built around rather than filled in with. Andy Warhol Museum has spent decades proving that the unlikely and the ordinary can share a wall without apology. Chive Ceramics Studio has shaped pieces exactly this unexpected by hand since 2004.
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Burnt Yellow Empire Cabbage Flower
Eclectic wall art earns its name by refusing to explain itself, and a Burnt Yellow Empire Cabbage Flower does exactly that from the name on down. This is not, by any measure, the prettiest name Chive has ever given a product — it sounds like something ordered off a menu without fully understanding it, only to arrive and turn out better than expected. Burnt yellow helps considerably, softening a shape that could otherwise read as strange into something that reads as deliberate. Ceramic holds that shape indefinitely, mounted with one screw, no soil, no wilting, no explaining to houseguests why a cabbage is on the wall. It's the kind of piece an eclectic room is built around rather than filled in with. Andy Warhol Museum has spent decades proving that the unlikely and the ordinary can share a wall without apology. Chive Ceramics Studio has shaped pieces exactly this unexpected by hand since 2004.
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Description
Eclectic wall art earns its name by refusing to explain itself, and a Burnt Yellow Empire Cabbage Flower does exactly that from the name on down. This is not, by any measure, the prettiest name Chive has ever given a product — it sounds like something ordered off a menu without fully understanding it, only to arrive and turn out better than expected. Burnt yellow helps considerably, softening a shape that could otherwise read as strange into something that reads as deliberate. Ceramic holds that shape indefinitely, mounted with one screw, no soil, no wilting, no explaining to houseguests why a cabbage is on the wall. It's the kind of piece an eclectic room is built around rather than filled in with. Andy Warhol Museum has spent decades proving that the unlikely and the ordinary can share a wall without apology. Chive Ceramics Studio has shaped pieces exactly this unexpected by hand since 2004.






















