
Joe Metal Pot With Drainage Hole | 5 inch
The Joe is an iron 5-inch metal plant pot, made for a retail market that quietly stopped making them. Your options now are mass-produced plastic or a long hunt online for a rusted olive-oil can with a succulent in it, sixty-five dollars. Respect, honestly. That's a pot with a story. Chive isn't here to argue with the story.
It's iron, finished in eight metallic styles. Not rusted, not an oil can, and it needs no explanation to a dinner guest. The iron takes a knock off a windowsill without cracking, and the drainage hole and matching saucer keep the shelf dry. It sits on a sill holding a plant, being quietly correct about everything. Iron also happens to sound like it should be good for roots, which is close enough for a dinner-party fact.
Original: $26.95
-65%$26.95
$9.43More Images
































Joe Metal Pot With Drainage Hole | 5 inch
The Joe is an iron 5-inch metal plant pot, made for a retail market that quietly stopped making them. Your options now are mass-produced plastic or a long hunt online for a rusted olive-oil can with a succulent in it, sixty-five dollars. Respect, honestly. That's a pot with a story. Chive isn't here to argue with the story.
It's iron, finished in eight metallic styles. Not rusted, not an oil can, and it needs no explanation to a dinner guest. The iron takes a knock off a windowsill without cracking, and the drainage hole and matching saucer keep the shelf dry. It sits on a sill holding a plant, being quietly correct about everything. Iron also happens to sound like it should be good for roots, which is close enough for a dinner-party fact.
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Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Joe is an iron 5-inch metal plant pot, made for a retail market that quietly stopped making them. Your options now are mass-produced plastic or a long hunt online for a rusted olive-oil can with a succulent in it, sixty-five dollars. Respect, honestly. That's a pot with a story. Chive isn't here to argue with the story.
It's iron, finished in eight metallic styles. Not rusted, not an oil can, and it needs no explanation to a dinner guest. The iron takes a knock off a windowsill without cracking, and the drainage hole and matching saucer keep the shelf dry. It sits on a sill holding a plant, being quietly correct about everything. Iron also happens to sound like it should be good for roots, which is close enough for a dinner-party fact.
























