
Blue Noir Pompon Dahlia
Japandi wall art at its most committed is the piece that uses the darkest available color in the most precisely structured form. The Blue Noir Pompon Dahlia is that piece: a handmade ceramic wall flower from the Japan Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a blue noir glaze — the blue-grey-black that reads as the deepest, most shadowed position in the Japan Collection's cool palette, the color of Japanese sumi ink at full saturation — shaped in the Pompon dahlia cultivar, which is the most precisely spherical of all dahlia forms, the cultivar that botanical breeders have worked toward the most perfect globe shape.
The deepest blue of a collection built on restraint
Chive designed the Japan Collection in 2020 around the Japanese aesthetic palette, and blue noir is the collection's deepest color — the blue that approaches black, the color of Japanese ink at maximum saturation, of the deep ocean that Japanese woodblock artists rendered in the darkest blues before running out of pigment. The Pompon form holds this darkest blue in its most precisely spherical structure: the blue noir Pompon reads as a sphere of Japanese ink suspended on a wall, the most restrained and most committed piece in a collection built on restraint and commitment. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries the Japan Collection.
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries the Japan Collection. The New York Botanical Garden stocks it. Longwood Gardens carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Botanical gardens across the greater New York area and Pennsylvania have independently decided this collection belongs in their shops. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for the Japandi room that has committed completely to dark restraint
The Blue Noir Pompon Dahlia ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries it. The room that has committed to the darkest end of the Japandi palette receives the Japan Collection's darkest piece from the same collection a botanical institution chose.
Original: $37.15
-65%$37.15
$13.00Product Information
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Description
Japandi wall art at its most committed is the piece that uses the darkest available color in the most precisely structured form. The Blue Noir Pompon Dahlia is that piece: a handmade ceramic wall flower from the Japan Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a blue noir glaze — the blue-grey-black that reads as the deepest, most shadowed position in the Japan Collection's cool palette, the color of Japanese sumi ink at full saturation — shaped in the Pompon dahlia cultivar, which is the most precisely spherical of all dahlia forms, the cultivar that botanical breeders have worked toward the most perfect globe shape.
The deepest blue of a collection built on restraint
Chive designed the Japan Collection in 2020 around the Japanese aesthetic palette, and blue noir is the collection's deepest color — the blue that approaches black, the color of Japanese ink at maximum saturation, of the deep ocean that Japanese woodblock artists rendered in the darkest blues before running out of pigment. The Pompon form holds this darkest blue in its most precisely spherical structure: the blue noir Pompon reads as a sphere of Japanese ink suspended on a wall, the most restrained and most committed piece in a collection built on restraint and commitment. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries the Japan Collection.
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries the Japan Collection. The New York Botanical Garden stocks it. Longwood Gardens carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Botanical gardens across the greater New York area and Pennsylvania have independently decided this collection belongs in their shops. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for the Japandi room that has committed completely to dark restraint
The Blue Noir Pompon Dahlia ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden carries it. The room that has committed to the darkest end of the Japandi palette receives the Japan Collection's darkest piece from the same collection a botanical institution chose.





















