France Ceramic Flower Blue Green Cabbage Flower

£10.90

After my sister had her baby, I found myself Googling "nursery art" with the same intensity others might research heart surgeons. The fact that infants can't appreciate wall art decor seemed irrelevant – I was determined to be the uncle who gave something meaningful, or at least something that wouldn't immediately end up in a donation bin. What I found was a ceramic flower, blue-green and roughly the size of a dessert plate, looking exactly like a cabbage if cabbages went to art school and developed existential angst. The website called it "abstract artwork," which felt like a generous way of saying "we're not quite sure what we made here either." The piece came with a keyhole mount, a term I had to look up, confirming my suspicion that I was wildly unqualified for this gift-giving mission. Wall-mounted flowers, it turns out, are the sort of thing that make people say, "Oh... how unique," in that tone that suggests they're mentally rearranging their friendship criteria. When I finally presented it, my sister stared at it for a long moment before asking if it was meant to be educational. "Yes," I lied, "it's teaching the baby about contemporary art movements. And vegetables."
Dimensions

4.53 inches diameter, 2.36 inches tall

Product Detail
  • Year Designed: 2024
  • Material: Ceramic
  • Finish: Glazed
  • Keyhole for Wall Hanging

Looks Great on Tables

Originally destined for tabletops, fate intervened when two domestic goddesses - Oprah and Martha themselves - declared these babies belonged on walls. Who could argue with that kind of decorating royalty?

Pretty Boxes

Each delicate ceramic blossom nestles in a box worthy of its artistry, wrapped with the kind of care that makes gift-givers beam with pride. Making others look thoughtful comes naturally around here.

Can be Used on a Wall

One discovers the most elegant of solutions: a humble keyhole adorns the reverse, yearning for nothing more than a single screw. Into drywall it slides, defying both gravity and common sense. Voilà - sweet victory.

Pretty Flowers in Pretty Boxes

After eleven years of toiling, arranging, and obsessing over more than a hundred varieties of flowers, one learns that the postal service harbors a peculiar vendetta against beauty. Like a jealous god waiting to smite anything delicate or refined. But victory comes in the form of sturdy, elegant boxes - the kind that make a recipient feel like royalty, while secretly being fortress-strong enough to survive even the most spiteful mail handler's wrath.

How to Hang

One discovers these flowers, each bearing a secret: a tiny keyhole nestled in the back, waiting for its destiny. The ritual feels almost predetermined - reaching into that dusty jar of orphaned screws, the ones squirreled away over countless home projects. Those odd bits of metal, collected like precious coins, finally finding their purpose. A quick twist of the drill, and there hangs beauty, supported by hardware whose previous life remains a mystery.