Pea Green Ghost Succulent

The Ghost Succulent understands ma. Most plants don't.

Regular price $32.15
Gift Ready Box
Ready-to-hang
30-day return policy

Build Your Floral Wall With These:

Designed to cluster naturally, like a wild garden. Choose a flower as your design anchor, then grow your custom floral wall with these companions:


Echeveria meaning ties closely to resilience, a plant built to hold its shape through drought, neglect, and long stretches without any attention at all. The Ghost Succulent takes that resilience and adds ma, the Japanese concept of negative space, where what's absent carries as much meaning as what's present. Pea Green is the color of something just deciding to exist, tentative and pale rather than fully committed to green just yet. Japandi wall art depends on exactly this kind of restraint, and the ghost variety supplies it without a single leaf out of place anywhere. At 4.3 inches diameter, this piece never needs light, water, or the vigilance a living succulent demands daily. The glaze holds its pale, uncertain color permanently, with no risk of the plant finally giving up. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has spent decades preserving objects meant to outlast their moment, which is the entire premise here too.

Product detail
  • Material: Ceramic
  • Glaze finish: Glazed
  • Mounting: Keyhole for Wall Hanging
  • Packaging: Individually packaged in gift ready box
  • Color: Pea Green
  • Glaze Variation: Natural variation between pieces
  • Year Designed: 2023
Dimension
  • 4.3 inches diameter, 2.2 inches tall
How to hang & display

Wall hanging

Works on drywall, plaster, or wood panelling. Drive a small screw at a slight upward angle, leaving the head proud of the wall. Slide the keyhole slot on the back over the screw head, adjust to level. Sits flush — no visible hardware.

No stud? No problem. A drywall anchor rated for the weight works fine.

Displaying a collection

Lay everything out on the floor first. Start with your anchor piece, build outward. Keep 2–3 inches between each piece and aim for the centre of the whole arrangement to land around eye level. Use painter's tape on the wall to map positions before committing to any screws.

Table & shelf display: Equally beautiful propped on a shelf, mantle, or side table. Pair with books, candles, or a small pot.

Full guide on how to hang your ceramic flower →

Care instructions
  1. Dust with a soft dry cloth or soft-bristled brush. Do not use wet cloths or liquid cleaners.
  2. Keep away from direct moisture, steam, and outdoor conditions. Indoor display only.
  3. Handle by the base or stem — avoid pressure on individual petals.
  4. If storing, return to original gift box with foam insert for protection.
Shipping & returns

Shipping

  • Free shipping: On qualifying US orders — threshold shown at checkout
  • Standard: 5–8 business days, Express 2–3 business days (at checkout)
  • International Ships: to 40 countries — rates at checkout
  • Packaging Ships: in outer box to protect gift box

View full shipping policy →

Returns

We accept returns within 30 days of delivery on unused items in original packaging. If your piece arrives damaged, contact us within 7 days with a photo and we will replace it at no charge.

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The Space Around It

There is a concept in Japanese design called ma, which roughly translates to negative space, though that translation loses most of what actually matters about it. Ma is not empty space. It is the pause that makes the note before it and the note after it both mean more than they would alone. The Ghost Succulent understands this in a way most plants never bother to. Pea Green is its most tentative color, early and uncertain, the shade of something that has just decided to exist and has not fully committed yet. Most decorative objects want to fill a wall completely. This one wants the opposite -- it wants room around it, a gap that belongs to the piece as much as the ceramic does. I think that is a harder thing to design for than abundance, honestly, since restraint has no obvious finish line to point to, no extra petal to add for effect. The succulent shape stays exactly as fired, pale and quietly unfinished-looking on purpose, permanently. No watering, no risk of the actual rot a real ghost succulent eventually manages given enough time and a little too much attention. Just the shape, and the space around it, holding steady indefinitely without asking for anything further.


Three ways to display it

Stunning table accent

Prop on a table, shelf, or beside books.

A gift that arrives beautifully

Beautiful Signature box. No wrapping needed.

English Garden Collection Ceramic flowers arranged on wall display as home decor art — Chive Studio Toronto

Ready to hang wall art

One screw. No Frame. Solo or gallery wall

Keyhole slot on back of Chive ceramic wall flower, single screw installation, easy hang no tools required

How to hang ceramic wall flowers?

One screw. No contractors. No drama.

One screw. One keyhole on the back. Ninety seconds and it's on the wall. The video shows exactly how it happens — no special hardware, no second holes, no contractor on speed dial. Whether you're hanging one piece or planning a full gallery wall, the hanging guide walks you through both.

Designed to Share the Same Room

Hitachi Park - 7 Piece Set - Chive Ceramics Studio - Ceramic Flower Sets - Chive Ceramics Studio

Part of the Japan Collection

The Japan collection learned its patience from rooms built around one object instead of a crowded shelf — an off-center bloom, an asymmetrical bract, a glaze left looking unfinished. Every piece trades abundance for one flower a room needs. Pea Green captures a succulent still deciding on its own color, tentative rather than fully committed to any single shade yet. A subdued, grey-green neighbor keeps the palette cohesive.

Explore the Grey Green Monch Aster.

Sneak Peek to our New Japan Ceramic Flower Wall Art Collection | Chive

Two Ways to Display

Every Chive ceramic flower works two ways: mounted vertically as a growing gallery wall, or laid flat as a no-water tablescape. Give the Pea Green Ghost Succulent real open space on the wall, since the piece was built entirely around the Japanese principle of ma and crowding it defeats the point. On a console, its pale, uncertain color functions as a quiet sculptural accent instead, needing no light, no water, and no succulent-specific worry at all.

Shop the full Japan Collection.

Three Chive Minute small ceramic pots in color blue layers, ivory speckles, and yellow styled with plants on a table indoor.

Complete the Look

The Ghost Succulent's pale, tentative green benefits from real open space around it rather than a busy neighbor pulling focus in the same direction. The Minute Ceramic Pot in blue aqua sits at a respectful distance in tone, cool rather than matching, and its attached saucer keeps any actual succulent's runoff contained without a second thought. One piece asks for nothing. The other asks for very little. Shop the Minute Ceramic Pot 5 Inch Blue Aqua.


Chive artisan hand-made ceramic flower petal without molds with keyholes for hanging

About Chive Ceramics Studio

A workshop that opened in 2004 around the bet that people prefer permanence to beauty-with-an-expiration-date has spent twenty years since testing that theory out in ceramic form. The bet has mostly paid off so far. Every piece passes through months of trial and small correction before it counts as finished enough to sell, chasing colors that sometimes exist in nature and sometimes only exist inside a studio test batch nobody else will see. Tricking anyone into thinking these were real plants was never the actual goal here. Permanence was the goal -- keeping the one detail that made a bloom interesting, indefinitely, without requiring anyone to track a watering calendar.


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Frequently asked questions

How does the Pea Green Ghost Succulent hang on the wall?

The Pea Green Ghost Succulent mounts flat against a wall using a single nail through its reinforced back mount, with no wire or frame needed. It hangs the way a small piece of art would rather than requiring a shelf, pot, or drainage tray. Once placed, it holds its position permanently with no adjusting required.

What does a succulent flower mean as a gift?

A succulent traditionally symbolizes endurance and resourcefulness, a plant built to survive drought and neglect that most other plants would not tolerate. As a gift, that meaning translates into something dependable rather than delicate. The Pea Green Ghost Succulent keeps that symbolism while removing the one thing succulents still occasionally fail at, which is actually surviving long-term.

Is a ceramic succulent a good gift idea?

Yes -- a ceramic succulent makes a strong general gift idea because it carries the plant's usual symbolism of resilience without any of the risk that a live succulent eventually dies anyway, which happens more often than people admit. The Pea Green Ghost Succulent looks the part permanently. No care instructions are required at any point.

Does a succulent work as japandi wall art?

A succulent works well as japandi wall art because the aesthetic favors organic, slightly irregular shapes over anything too polished or symmetrical. The Ghost Succulent's pale, unfinished-looking form fits that philosophy directly, reading as considered rather than decorative. Hung with some open space around it, it captures exactly the restraint japandi design asks for.

Does the Pea Green Ghost Succulent ship in a gift box?

The Pea Green Ghost Succulent ships in branded, gift-ready packaging designed to be handed over as-is, with no additional wrapping needed beforehand. It arrives looking deliberately packaged rather than grabbed off a shelf at the last minute. That detail carries more weight than people expect once the gift is actually being opened.

What is a good gift for a forgetful plant owner?

A gift for a forgetful plant owner should remove the plant-care requirement entirely rather than just simplifying it, and a ceramic succulent does exactly that. The Pea Green Ghost Succulent never needs watering, light monitoring, or the guilt that comes with yet another dead plant on a windowsill. It just stays there, looking exactly the same, indefinitely.

Does a Pea Green ceramic succulent outlast a fresh one?

A Pea Green ceramic succulent outlasts a real succulent more often than people expect, since even low-maintenance succulents can rot from overwatering or fail from underwatering within months. This ceramic version has no such failure mode -- it holds its shape and pale color indefinitely with zero care required. The comparison is not particularly close.

Is a ceramic succulent a good gift for plant killers?

A ceramic succulent is an ideal gift for a self-described plant killer, since it removes the entire risk of failure that comes with keeping something alive. The Pea Green Ghost Succulent looks the part of a thriving plant permanently, without requiring any actual plant care skill. Nothing about it can die on their watch.

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