
Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus
French country decor earns its name by understanding the difference between peach and pink — peach is warm, specific, the color of something grown in the south of France in August rather than printed on a greeting card. The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the France Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a peach pink glaze, shaped in the Cloni cultivar — the ranunculus form that botanical illustrators have been drawing for two centuries because the petals do something structurally unusual.
The collection French Vogue ran in their home section
Chive is choosing to interpret this as an endorsement, which seems reasonable given the publication and the context. The France Collection palette — blush, peach, rose quartz, milk teal — reads as a specific editorial decision about color, which is what French Vogue is best positioned to evaluate. The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus is the peach version of the palette: warm without being orange, pink without being sweet. The Cloni ranunculus form has more petals than the Amandine or Elegance cultivars, creating a fuller, more spherical profile that carries the peach pink glaze across a larger surface area.
The Art Institute of Chicago carries the France Collection. The SFMOMA gift shop stocks it. The Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Art institutions from Chicago to San Francisco to Pasadena have arrived at the same purchasing decision about this collection. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for someone who has been to the south of France and wants that color on their wall
The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. The Art Institute of Chicago carries it. The person who has been to Provence and wants that specific peach on their wall receives a ceramic interpretation of exactly that color from a studio French Vogue decided to feature.
Original: $29.65
-65%$29.65
$10.38Product Information
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Description
French country decor earns its name by understanding the difference between peach and pink — peach is warm, specific, the color of something grown in the south of France in August rather than printed on a greeting card. The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the France Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a peach pink glaze, shaped in the Cloni cultivar — the ranunculus form that botanical illustrators have been drawing for two centuries because the petals do something structurally unusual.
The collection French Vogue ran in their home section
Chive is choosing to interpret this as an endorsement, which seems reasonable given the publication and the context. The France Collection palette — blush, peach, rose quartz, milk teal — reads as a specific editorial decision about color, which is what French Vogue is best positioned to evaluate. The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus is the peach version of the palette: warm without being orange, pink without being sweet. The Cloni ranunculus form has more petals than the Amandine or Elegance cultivars, creating a fuller, more spherical profile that carries the peach pink glaze across a larger surface area.
The Art Institute of Chicago carries the France Collection. The SFMOMA gift shop stocks it. The Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens carries it. The RHS Chelsea Flower Show awarded Chive the 5-star booth award — the highest rating given — for 13 consecutive years. Art institutions from Chicago to San Francisco to Pasadena have arrived at the same purchasing decision about this collection. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for someone who has been to the south of France and wants that color on their wall
The Peach Pink Cloni Ranunculus ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. The Art Institute of Chicago carries it. The person who has been to Provence and wants that specific peach on their wall receives a ceramic interpretation of exactly that color from a studio French Vogue decided to feature.























