Rhubarb Hanging Planter

$45.00

Wheel-thrown Pioneer Dark stoneware | 4.5" diameter × 3.25" tall | Micro paracord hanger | Oregon clay

Quietly the most dramatic thing in the room.

This hanging planter was wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Pioneer Dark stoneware — a warm khaki clay with natural iron that catches light like it was made for it — then glazed in Rhubarb, applied in a bold, painterly arc that rises from the base like a moon, or a horizon, or something you'd pull out of a spring garden and be unreasonably pleased about.

The upper body stays true to the Pioneer Dark clay — warm, speckled, golden in certain light — while the Rhubarb glaze pools below in soft dusty rose and blush, the two meeting in a line that looks entirely intentional because it is. No carving here. No texture. Just an exceptionally well-thrown form and a glaze decision that did exactly what it was supposed to do.

You'll also notice the VR maker's mark pressed into the side — a small stamp that means this came from somewhere specific, made by someone who cared about getting it right.

The hanger is braided micro paracord in a warm neutral tone, twisted by hand to complement the earthy warmth of the Pioneer Dark clay.

At 4.5" wide and 3.25" tall it's the perfect size for a trailing plant with good taste, a compact succulent, or anything that deserves to be seen from below at its very best angle.

One of a kind. The Rhubarb arc lands differently on every piece — this particular horizon exists only once.

****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.

Wheel-thrown Pioneer Dark stoneware | 4.5" diameter × 3.25" tall | Micro paracord hanger | Oregon clay

Quietly the most dramatic thing in the room.

This hanging planter was wheel-thrown in my Portland studio from Pioneer Dark stoneware — a warm khaki clay with natural iron that catches light like it was made for it — then glazed in Rhubarb, applied in a bold, painterly arc that rises from the base like a moon, or a horizon, or something you'd pull out of a spring garden and be unreasonably pleased about.

The upper body stays true to the Pioneer Dark clay — warm, speckled, golden in certain light — while the Rhubarb glaze pools below in soft dusty rose and blush, the two meeting in a line that looks entirely intentional because it is. No carving here. No texture. Just an exceptionally well-thrown form and a glaze decision that did exactly what it was supposed to do.

You'll also notice the VR maker's mark pressed into the side — a small stamp that means this came from somewhere specific, made by someone who cared about getting it right.

The hanger is braided micro paracord in a warm neutral tone, twisted by hand to complement the earthy warmth of the Pioneer Dark clay.

At 4.5" wide and 3.25" tall it's the perfect size for a trailing plant with good taste, a compact succulent, or anything that deserves to be seen from below at its very best angle.

One of a kind. The Rhubarb arc lands differently on every piece — this particular horizon exists only once.

****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.