
Minute Medium Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Green Cement
The 5" Ceramic Plant Pot in Green Cement is a glazed ceramic plant pot from Minute, the line where we stopped pretending to be modest. At five inches the Minute finally has the surface area for the glazes to move, blend, and do the thing people pick the pot up and turn over twice to understand.
Green Cement reads matte and mineral, a muted green over a gray-cement base that looks unglazed until you touch it. A center drainage hole and a matching saucer sit under the glaze, because a pot this involved still has to keep a plant alive.
At five inches there is finally room for the glaze to misbehave on purpose. It looks unglazed until you touch it, at which point it stops pretending.
Original: $30.95
-65%$30.95
$10.83More Images




Minute Medium Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Green Cement
The 5" Ceramic Plant Pot in Green Cement is a glazed ceramic plant pot from Minute, the line where we stopped pretending to be modest. At five inches the Minute finally has the surface area for the glazes to move, blend, and do the thing people pick the pot up and turn over twice to understand.
Green Cement reads matte and mineral, a muted green over a gray-cement base that looks unglazed until you touch it. A center drainage hole and a matching saucer sit under the glaze, because a pot this involved still has to keep a plant alive.
At five inches there is finally room for the glaze to misbehave on purpose. It looks unglazed until you touch it, at which point it stops pretending.
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Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
Description
The 5" Ceramic Plant Pot in Green Cement is a glazed ceramic plant pot from Minute, the line where we stopped pretending to be modest. At five inches the Minute finally has the surface area for the glazes to move, blend, and do the thing people pick the pot up and turn over twice to understand.
Green Cement reads matte and mineral, a muted green over a gray-cement base that looks unglazed until you touch it. A center drainage hole and a matching saucer sit under the glaze, because a pot this involved still has to keep a plant alive.
At five inches there is finally room for the glaze to misbehave on purpose. It looks unglazed until you touch it, at which point it stops pretending.
























