
Dyad Medium Porcelain Plant Pot
The 5" matte-and-glossy porcelain plant pot is part of the Dyad line, built on a single idea: a matte body paired with a glossy glaze. Matte does the quiet work and the gloss gets the attention, and the line where they meet is the part you will keep touching. Neither finish is especially interesting alone; together they are difficult to put back down.
A matte body under a glossy glaze, 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.
At five inches the contrast finally reads across a room, which is when you realize the appeal was never subtle. It only looked subtle. There is a difference.
Original: $28.50
-65%$28.50
$9.97More Images
























Dyad Medium Porcelain Plant Pot
The 5" matte-and-glossy porcelain plant pot is part of the Dyad line, built on a single idea: a matte body paired with a glossy glaze. Matte does the quiet work and the gloss gets the attention, and the line where they meet is the part you will keep touching. Neither finish is especially interesting alone; together they are difficult to put back down.
A matte body under a glossy glaze, 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.
At five inches the contrast finally reads across a room, which is when you realize the appeal was never subtle. It only looked subtle. There is a difference.
Product Information
Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
Description
The 5" matte-and-glossy porcelain plant pot is part of the Dyad line, built on a single idea: a matte body paired with a glossy glaze. Matte does the quiet work and the gloss gets the attention, and the line where they meet is the part you will keep touching. Neither finish is especially interesting alone; together they are difficult to put back down.
A matte body under a glossy glaze, 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.
At five inches the contrast finally reads across a room, which is when you realize the appeal was never subtle. It only looked subtle. There is a difference.






















