
Navy Sorbet Peony
Japandi wall art at its most dramatic is the deep navy botanical — the color of Japanese indigo dye, of the deep ocean in a Hokusai wave, of the specific blue-black that appears in the most celebrated Japanese woodblock prints and in the highest-quality Japanese lacquerware. The Navy Sorbet Peony is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the Japan Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a navy glaze, shaped in the Sorbet peony cultivar — the semi-double open form that holds the navy at its deepest and most present.
The Japanese indigo of a collection built on the deep blue tradition
Chive designed the Japan Collection in 2020 around the Japanese aesthetic palette, and navy is the collection's deepest, most grounded blue — not the atmospheric seasonal blue, not the woodblock fancy blue, not the iris violet blue, but the deep Japanese indigo that textile makers and lacquerware artists have been using for centuries as the color that reads as both deeply natural and deeply deliberate. The Sorbet peony form holds navy at its most open — the semi-double form lets navy breathe in the visible center rather than packing it into a fully double sphere. SFMOMA carries the Japan Collection.
SFMOMA carries the Japan Collection. The Art Gallery of Ontario stocks it. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 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 San Francisco to Toronto to Cleveland have independently decided this collection belongs in their gift shops. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for the person who wants the Japan Collection's deepest indigo on the most open peony form
The Navy Sorbet Peony ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. SFMOMA carries it. The person who wants the Japan Collection's deepest blue in the peony form most compatible with the Japanese appreciation of natural imperfection receives the Navy Sorbet from the same collection SFMOMA chose.
Original: $47.15
-65%$47.15
$16.50Product Information
Product Information
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Description
Japandi wall art at its most dramatic is the deep navy botanical — the color of Japanese indigo dye, of the deep ocean in a Hokusai wave, of the specific blue-black that appears in the most celebrated Japanese woodblock prints and in the highest-quality Japanese lacquerware. The Navy Sorbet Peony is a handmade ceramic wall flower from the Japan Collection, kiln-fired in Toronto in a navy glaze, shaped in the Sorbet peony cultivar — the semi-double open form that holds the navy at its deepest and most present.
The Japanese indigo of a collection built on the deep blue tradition
Chive designed the Japan Collection in 2020 around the Japanese aesthetic palette, and navy is the collection's deepest, most grounded blue — not the atmospheric seasonal blue, not the woodblock fancy blue, not the iris violet blue, but the deep Japanese indigo that textile makers and lacquerware artists have been using for centuries as the color that reads as both deeply natural and deeply deliberate. The Sorbet peony form holds navy at its most open — the semi-double form lets navy breathe in the visible center rather than packing it into a fully double sphere. SFMOMA carries the Japan Collection.
SFMOMA carries the Japan Collection. The Art Gallery of Ontario stocks it. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 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 San Francisco to Toronto to Cleveland have independently decided this collection belongs in their gift shops. Chive has been designing and making ceramic flowers in Toronto since 1999.
A gift for the person who wants the Japan Collection's deepest indigo on the most open peony form
The Navy Sorbet Peony ships in a Chive gift box. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds. SFMOMA carries it. The person who wants the Japan Collection's deepest blue in the peony form most compatible with the Japanese appreciation of natural imperfection receives the Navy Sorbet from the same collection SFMOMA chose.





















