
Formed from ceramic and finished with a reactive lava-glaze technique, this wide-mouthed planter carries the kind of surface texture that reads as ancient — bubbled, pooled, and uneven in the most considered way. Earthy browns warm beneath a wash of mossy green, each pot emerging from the kiln slightly different from the last. A built-in drainage hole at the base keeps roots healthy through rain and overwatering alike, making it as practical on a front porch as it is at home on a garden terrace.
Because this glaze is applied by hand and fired at high temperatures, the depth of color and surface texture will vary from piece to piece — no two are identical.
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The Story
Formed from ceramic and finished with a reactive lava-glaze technique, this wide-mouthed planter carries the kind of surface texture that reads as ancient — bubbled, pooled, and uneven in the most considered way. Earthy browns warm beneath a wash of mossy green, each pot emerging from the kiln slightly different from the last. A built-in drainage hole at the base keeps roots healthy through rain and overwatering alike, making it as practical on a front porch as it is at home on a garden terrace.
Because this glaze is applied by hand and fired at high temperatures, the depth of color and surface texture will vary from piece to piece — no two are identical.
Details & Materials
Dimensions
Care
Shipping & Returns
Shipping calculated at checkout.
30-day returns on unused pieces.
The pot that holds its own ground
You set it on the porch with soil still on your hands, moss scattered across the deck boards. The lava-glazed surface catches the afternoon light — something between stone and sea glass — and whatever goes in it looks like it was always meant to be there.



