
February Birth Flower - Primrose
Primrose flower meaning has one job in February: show up in a color that has no business being this confident in the shortest, greyest month of the year. Nobody claims February. The chartreuse primrose does anyway, without making a whole production out of it, which is harder than it sounds and rarer than it should be. Five overlapping petals, each hand-shaped so the layering falls slightly differently every time, in a glaze bright enough to read from across a room on a day when nothing outside is that bright. Artisans at Chive Ceramics Studio shape every layer by hand, so the color survives long after the actual flower has finished its two-week run outdoors. Brooklyn Botanic Garden has kept early bloomers like this one in its living collection for over a century, on the theory that the first real color of the year deserves close attention. Confident color has had a place at Chive since 2004.
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February Birth Flower - Primrose
Primrose flower meaning has one job in February: show up in a color that has no business being this confident in the shortest, greyest month of the year. Nobody claims February. The chartreuse primrose does anyway, without making a whole production out of it, which is harder than it sounds and rarer than it should be. Five overlapping petals, each hand-shaped so the layering falls slightly differently every time, in a glaze bright enough to read from across a room on a day when nothing outside is that bright. Artisans at Chive Ceramics Studio shape every layer by hand, so the color survives long after the actual flower has finished its two-week run outdoors. Brooklyn Botanic Garden has kept early bloomers like this one in its living collection for over a century, on the theory that the first real color of the year deserves close attention. Confident color has had a place at Chive since 2004.
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Primrose flower meaning has one job in February: show up in a color that has no business being this confident in the shortest, greyest month of the year. Nobody claims February. The chartreuse primrose does anyway, without making a whole production out of it, which is harder than it sounds and rarer than it should be. Five overlapping petals, each hand-shaped so the layering falls slightly differently every time, in a glaze bright enough to read from across a room on a day when nothing outside is that bright. Artisans at Chive Ceramics Studio shape every layer by hand, so the color survives long after the actual flower has finished its two-week run outdoors. Brooklyn Botanic Garden has kept early bloomers like this one in its living collection for over a century, on the theory that the first real color of the year deserves close attention. Confident color has had a place at Chive since 2004.
























