
Diamond Medium Porcelain Plant Pot
The 5" geometric porcelain plant pot is part of the Diamond line: four equal sides, clean angles, and a faceted form that catches light the way a round pot cannot. It is geometry on purpose, precise rather than loud, and it reads as a deliberate object from across a room instead of a default pulled off a shelf.
A precise four-sided form, with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer. At five inches it suits a settled shelf plant: a pothos, a peperomia, or a young fern. The drainage hole keeps water moving instead of pooling at the roots, and the matching saucer keeps it off the surface underneath, so the pot works as well on a windowsill as it does on a shelf.
We learned the hard way which shapes belong on a shelf and which belong in a drawer no one opens. This one belongs on the shelf.
Original: $28.50
-65%$28.50
$9.97More Images





Diamond Medium Porcelain Plant Pot
The 5" geometric porcelain plant pot is part of the Diamond line: four equal sides, clean angles, and a faceted form that catches light the way a round pot cannot. It is geometry on purpose, precise rather than loud, and it reads as a deliberate object from across a room instead of a default pulled off a shelf.
A precise four-sided form, with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer. At five inches it suits a settled shelf plant: a pothos, a peperomia, or a young fern. The drainage hole keeps water moving instead of pooling at the roots, and the matching saucer keeps it off the surface underneath, so the pot works as well on a windowsill as it does on a shelf.
We learned the hard way which shapes belong on a shelf and which belong in a drawer no one opens. This one belongs on the shelf.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The 5" geometric porcelain plant pot is part of the Diamond line: four equal sides, clean angles, and a faceted form that catches light the way a round pot cannot. It is geometry on purpose, precise rather than loud, and it reads as a deliberate object from across a room instead of a default pulled off a shelf.
A precise four-sided form, with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer. At five inches it suits a settled shelf plant: a pothos, a peperomia, or a young fern. The drainage hole keeps water moving instead of pooling at the roots, and the matching saucer keeps it off the surface underneath, so the pot works as well on a windowsill as it does on a shelf.
We learned the hard way which shapes belong on a shelf and which belong in a drawer no one opens. This one belongs on the shelf.






















