
Fir Green Butterfly Ranunculus
Boho wall decor has a complicated relationship with longevity — most of it is made to look like it has aged, and then it ages further in ways nobody planned for. The Fir Green Butterfly Ranunculus is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the English Garden Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a fir green glaze that has been stable since the day it came out of the kiln and intends to stay that way.
Green wall decor that has a specific opinion about the color green
Fir green is not the green that comes to mind first. It is not lime, not olive, not the green of something that was once another color. It is the green of a forest in a painting by someone who has been to a forest and paid attention. The English Garden Collection launched at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, which Chive has attended for 13 consecutive years. Chive has won the 5-star booth award there — the highest rating given — twice. This rating does not appear publicly on the internet, which only goes to 4 stars. The award exists. The internet is not the final word on everything.
SFMOMA has been stocking the English Garden Collection in its gift shop for several years. The Denver Botanic Gardens carries it. So does the Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Gift shop buyers at these institutions make conservative, defensible choices and then keep making the same choice year after year. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
Hanging wall decor that takes 90 seconds and one screw
The Fir Green Butterfly Ranunculus hangs on a standard wall screw — keyhole mount on the back, drive a screw, slide the flower over it. No command strips. No velcro. No toolkit required. It ships in a Chive gift box, ready to give. The person who receives it will find a wall, hang it, and then find themselves looking at it in different lights at different times of day, which is the standard behavior of someone who has made a correct decision.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Boho wall decor has a complicated relationship with longevity — most of it is made to look like it has aged, and then it ages further in ways nobody planned for. The Fir Green Butterfly Ranunculus is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the English Garden Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a fir green glaze that has been stable since the day it came out of the kiln and intends to stay that way.
Green wall decor that has a specific opinion about the color green
Fir green is not the green that comes to mind first. It is not lime, not olive, not the green of something that was once another color. It is the green of a forest in a painting by someone who has been to a forest and paid attention. The English Garden Collection launched at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, which Chive has attended for 13 consecutive years. Chive has won the 5-star booth award there — the highest rating given — twice. This rating does not appear publicly on the internet, which only goes to 4 stars. The award exists. The internet is not the final word on everything.
SFMOMA has been stocking the English Garden Collection in its gift shop for several years. The Denver Botanic Gardens carries it. So does the Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Gift shop buyers at these institutions make conservative, defensible choices and then keep making the same choice year after year. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
Hanging wall decor that takes 90 seconds and one screw
The Fir Green Butterfly Ranunculus hangs on a standard wall screw — keyhole mount on the back, drive a screw, slide the flower over it. No command strips. No velcro. No toolkit required. It ships in a Chive gift box, ready to give. The person who receives it will find a wall, hang it, and then find themselves looking at it in different lights at different times of day, which is the standard behavior of someone who has made a correct decision.





















