Chive at Home, Because Your Plants Deserve Better Than That Sad Corner
Welcome to the part of the internet where houseplants are heroes, ceramic flowers defy gravity, and your questionable design choices get a stylish second chance.
Here at Chive, we’re serving up home decor tips with a side of sass — from how to style your plants so they don’t look like you just shoved them on a shelf, to hanging ceramic flowers like you actually know what you’re doing.
Minimal effort, maximum style. Let’s make your home look like you tried (but not too hard).
What Is My Birth Flower: April
The April birth flower is the Daisy — symbol of resilience, new beginnings, and quiet strength. It grows on six continents, comes back after being mowed, and was sacred to Freya before anyone called it simple. Your full personality report is inside.
What Is my Birth Flower: March
The March birth flower is the Daffodil — symbol of new beginnings, hope, and resilience. It blooms before spring is ready and has signaled something good is coming across cultures for centuries. It has thoughts about you specifically.
What Is My Birth Flower: February
The February birth flower is the Primrose — the first bloom of late winter, symbolizing early love and joy that survives the hardest month. It blooms yellow in February on purpose. Find out what your birth flower says about you.
What Is My Birth Flower: August
August birth flower is the poppy — bold and expressive, captures attention with its delicate petals and vibrant hues. Often associated with remembrance, imagination, and resilience. The poppy adds a vivid, meaningful touch that celebrates creativity and strength.
What is My Birth Flower: September
The September birth flower is the Aster — named for the Greek word for star, associated with wisdom and valor. Chive Studio makes it in Blue: ceramic, permanent, and open in all weather.
What is My Birth Flower: January
The January birth flower is the Snowdrop: blooms in frost, makes its own antifreeze, and showed up before conditions were favorable. Chive Studio makes it in ceramic, permanently. The personality report is going to feel personal.
What Is My Birth Flower: December
The December birth flower is the Narcissus — a winter-blooming symbol of hope, renewal, and new beginnings. Sacred in ancient Greece, China, Persia, and Egypt before any of them knew the others existed. Your birth flower blooms in the dark. Find out why that's exactly right.
What is My Birth Flower: July
The July birth flower is the water lily — serene on the surface, full structural operation underneath. Every major civilization built a mythology around it. Monet gave it thirty years of his life. Here's why that tracks completely for July people.
What is My Birth Flower: May
The May birth flower is the Hawthorn — a symbol of protection, hope, and resilience with roots in Celtic mythology and traditional medicine. It blooms once a year, spectacularly, for the people it chooses. The thorns are not a warning. They're a guarantee.
What is My Birth Flower: June
The June birth flower is the Rose - symbolizing love, secrecy, and loyalty to every civilization that ever encountered it. Chive makes it in ceramics. Read on if you think the rose needs no introduction and are about to be proven wrong.
Birth Flowers by Month: The Complete Guide
Birth flowers are the flowers assigned to each month of the year, a system with roots in ancient Rome. Chive makes all 12 in ceramic, stocked at the Getty Museum and the New York Botanical Garden. Every month is here, every glaze color is argued for, and one of them is yours.
What is My Birth Flower: November
The chrysanthemum is the November birth flower, cultivated across China and Japan for over two thousand years. Chive makes it in Buttercup Yellow ceramic — a glaze twenty-five years in development, now in botanical garden collections across North America. Turns out the flower that survived two millennia is also the easiest gift you will give this year.












