
Moog Porcelain Succulent Garden Dish - Peacock Green
The Moog in Green is a low, wide ceramic succulent dish, built for plants with shallow roots and firm opinions about drainage, which it handles the way every pot in this collection handles it, by asking you to water with restraint. Green is the color we reach for when the plant should be the hero.
Green is the most plant-like of the colors, which means a succulent sitting in it looks less like decor and more like it grew there. The Moog is also, by now, the studio lunch plate, a role it acquired without a vote and performs without complaint. There is no drainage hole, so keep the plants drought-tolerant and the watering light. Ryan owns a set as dinnerware, which we are not going to relitigate here, except to note that a dish good enough to eat off is usually good enough to grow something in, and the Moog is comfortably both.
Original: $31.50
-65%$31.50
$11.02More Images

Moog Porcelain Succulent Garden Dish - Peacock Green
The Moog in Green is a low, wide ceramic succulent dish, built for plants with shallow roots and firm opinions about drainage, which it handles the way every pot in this collection handles it, by asking you to water with restraint. Green is the color we reach for when the plant should be the hero.
Green is the most plant-like of the colors, which means a succulent sitting in it looks less like decor and more like it grew there. The Moog is also, by now, the studio lunch plate, a role it acquired without a vote and performs without complaint. There is no drainage hole, so keep the plants drought-tolerant and the watering light. Ryan owns a set as dinnerware, which we are not going to relitigate here, except to note that a dish good enough to eat off is usually good enough to grow something in, and the Moog is comfortably both.
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Shipping & Returns
Description
The Moog in Green is a low, wide ceramic succulent dish, built for plants with shallow roots and firm opinions about drainage, which it handles the way every pot in this collection handles it, by asking you to water with restraint. Green is the color we reach for when the plant should be the hero.
Green is the most plant-like of the colors, which means a succulent sitting in it looks less like decor and more like it grew there. The Moog is also, by now, the studio lunch plate, a role it acquired without a vote and performs without complaint. There is no drainage hole, so keep the plants drought-tolerant and the watering light. Ryan owns a set as dinnerware, which we are not going to relitigate here, except to note that a dish good enough to eat off is usually good enough to grow something in, and the Moog is comfortably both.
























