
Peridot Comanche Peony
Nursery wall art has a shelf life problem — most of it is designed for a child who is three, which means it is wrong by the time the child is six and embarrassing by twelve. The Peridot Comanche Peony is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the English Garden Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto and glazed in a peridot green that has no age range, no expiry date, and no opinion about what stage of childhood the room is currently in.
Grandmillennial decor with 25 years of actual grandmother energy behind it
The grandmillennial aesthetic is built on the idea that traditional forms executed with genuine craft earn their place in a room regardless of the decade. A ceramic peony from a Toronto studio that has been making ceramic flowers since 1999 and shows at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show — where Chive has received the 5-star booth award twice, a rating that exists at the show and not on the internet's public record, which only goes to 4 stars — is exactly the kind of object the aesthetic was assembled to accommodate. The Comanche peony is a large-flowered cultivar. The scale reads immediately. The peridot glaze is not a color that hedges.
The Andy Warhol Museum gift shop carries the English Garden Collection. The Parrish Museum in the Hamptons stocks it. The Museum of Fine Arts Boston carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Museums with strong design collections tend to stock things that have a clear point of view.
Last minute gifts that do not look like last minute gifts
The Peridot Comanche Peony ships in a Chive gift box, ready to give. It does not require wrapping, assembly, or any preparation beyond being ordered. It arrives looking like it was chosen carefully, which is the only thing that distinguishes a last minute gift from a considered one. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. It requires nothing after that. The person who receives it will not ask when it was ordered.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Nursery wall art has a shelf life problem — most of it is designed for a child who is three, which means it is wrong by the time the child is six and embarrassing by twelve. The Peridot Comanche Peony is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the English Garden Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto and glazed in a peridot green that has no age range, no expiry date, and no opinion about what stage of childhood the room is currently in.
Grandmillennial decor with 25 years of actual grandmother energy behind it
The grandmillennial aesthetic is built on the idea that traditional forms executed with genuine craft earn their place in a room regardless of the decade. A ceramic peony from a Toronto studio that has been making ceramic flowers since 1999 and shows at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show — where Chive has received the 5-star booth award twice, a rating that exists at the show and not on the internet's public record, which only goes to 4 stars — is exactly the kind of object the aesthetic was assembled to accommodate. The Comanche peony is a large-flowered cultivar. The scale reads immediately. The peridot glaze is not a color that hedges.
The Andy Warhol Museum gift shop carries the English Garden Collection. The Parrish Museum in the Hamptons stocks it. The Museum of Fine Arts Boston carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Museums with strong design collections tend to stock things that have a clear point of view.
Last minute gifts that do not look like last minute gifts
The Peridot Comanche Peony ships in a Chive gift box, ready to give. It does not require wrapping, assembly, or any preparation beyond being ordered. It arrives looking like it was chosen carefully, which is the only thing that distinguishes a last minute gift from a considered one. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. It requires nothing after that. The person who receives it will not ask when it was ordered.





















