
Minute Small Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Terracotta
The 3-inch Terracotta is a glazed ceramic plant pot with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer, made for people who, like us, generally cannot stand terracotta. We hate terracotta pots. Period, end of sentence. They are the default, the thing you buy when you have not thought about it, the color every garden center keeps in a stack of forty identical pots by the door. We are aware of the irony of a studio that resents terracotta releasing a terracotta, and we have decided the irony is part of the appeal.
Glazed ceramic holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, and the finish resolves a little differently on every pot. We made one anyway, but only after putting a simple, modern twist on it that actually makes it look like someone made a decision. The three-inch version is terracotta for the terracotta skeptic, which is to say, for us.
Original: $16.50
-65%$16.50
$5.77More Images




Minute Small Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Terracotta
The 3-inch Terracotta is a glazed ceramic plant pot with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer, made for people who, like us, generally cannot stand terracotta. We hate terracotta pots. Period, end of sentence. They are the default, the thing you buy when you have not thought about it, the color every garden center keeps in a stack of forty identical pots by the door. We are aware of the irony of a studio that resents terracotta releasing a terracotta, and we have decided the irony is part of the appeal.
Glazed ceramic holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, and the finish resolves a little differently on every pot. We made one anyway, but only after putting a simple, modern twist on it that actually makes it look like someone made a decision. The three-inch version is terracotta for the terracotta skeptic, which is to say, for us.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The 3-inch Terracotta is a glazed ceramic plant pot with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer, made for people who, like us, generally cannot stand terracotta. We hate terracotta pots. Period, end of sentence. They are the default, the thing you buy when you have not thought about it, the color every garden center keeps in a stack of forty identical pots by the door. We are aware of the irony of a studio that resents terracotta releasing a terracotta, and we have decided the irony is part of the appeal.
Glazed ceramic holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, and the finish resolves a little differently on every pot. We made one anyway, but only after putting a simple, modern twist on it that actually makes it look like someone made a decision. The three-inch version is terracotta for the terracotta skeptic, which is to say, for us.
























