Halo Hanging Planter

$30.00

Wheel-thrown Trailmix Dark Chocolate stoneware | 3.5" diameter × 2.5" tall | Dark micro paracord hanger | Oregon clay

Purple went in. This came out.

That's ceramics for you.

This small hanging planter was wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Trailmix Dark Chocolate stoneware — a deep, near-black clay that has a gift for transforming glazes into something unexpected. Halo Purple by Georgie's was applied in a sweeping arc across the lower body, and what the kiln gave back was this — a soft, luminous celadon-green that glows against the dark clay like moonlight on still water, like the inside of a shell, like something lit from within.

The glaze arc meets the dark clay at the rim in that same landscape line that appears across the hanging planter series — the place where two things meet and something beautiful happens at the boundary. Here it's particularly dramatic: near-black above, luminous green below, the line between them soft and slightly irregular the way any honest edge tends to be.

Small, round, and completely confident about both of those things.

The hanger is braided dark micro paracord, twisted by hand to complement the depth of the Trailmix Dark Chocolate clay body.

At 3.5" wide and 2.5" tall this is the petite one — perfect for a single air plant, a tiny succulent, or anything small that deserves a vessel with this much quiet drama. It layers beautifully with the Cove and Shoreline planters — three pieces in the same Trailmix Dark Chocolate and Satin Oribe family, each with its own glaze personality.

A note on how this is made: The interior is intentionally left unglazed — raw stoneware breathes in a way glazed clay simply can't, and your plant roots will thank you for it. There are no drainage holes, because this planter is designed to be used with a grow pot nestled inside. Slip your plant in its nursery pot, hang it up, and lift it out easily to water properly and check on root health without ceremony or mess. The bottom is finished with as much care as the outside — smooth, clean, and beautiful — because when something hangs overhead, the view from below matters just as much as the view from across the room.

One of a kind. Halo Purple fires to green on dark clay — every time differently, never quite the same. This particular halo exists only once.

Wheel-thrown Trailmix Dark Chocolate stoneware | 3.5" diameter × 2.5" tall | Dark micro paracord hanger | Oregon clay

Purple went in. This came out.

That's ceramics for you.

This small hanging planter was wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Trailmix Dark Chocolate stoneware — a deep, near-black clay that has a gift for transforming glazes into something unexpected. Halo Purple by Georgie's was applied in a sweeping arc across the lower body, and what the kiln gave back was this — a soft, luminous celadon-green that glows against the dark clay like moonlight on still water, like the inside of a shell, like something lit from within.

The glaze arc meets the dark clay at the rim in that same landscape line that appears across the hanging planter series — the place where two things meet and something beautiful happens at the boundary. Here it's particularly dramatic: near-black above, luminous green below, the line between them soft and slightly irregular the way any honest edge tends to be.

Small, round, and completely confident about both of those things.

The hanger is braided dark micro paracord, twisted by hand to complement the depth of the Trailmix Dark Chocolate clay body.

At 3.5" wide and 2.5" tall this is the petite one — perfect for a single air plant, a tiny succulent, or anything small that deserves a vessel with this much quiet drama. It layers beautifully with the Cove and Shoreline planters — three pieces in the same Trailmix Dark Chocolate and Satin Oribe family, each with its own glaze personality.

A note on how this is made: The interior is intentionally left unglazed — raw stoneware breathes in a way glazed clay simply can't, and your plant roots will thank you for it. There are no drainage holes, because this planter is designed to be used with a grow pot nestled inside. Slip your plant in its nursery pot, hang it up, and lift it out easily to water properly and check on root health without ceremony or mess. The bottom is finished with as much care as the outside — smooth, clean, and beautiful — because when something hangs overhead, the view from below matters just as much as the view from across the room.

One of a kind. Halo Purple fires to green on dark clay — every time differently, never quite the same. This particular halo exists only once.