February Birth Flower - Primrose

February's flower. Chartreuse was always the answer.

Regular price $24.65

February birth flower gifts run a narrow course between heart-shaped boxes and cut roses that will be gone by Valentine's Day. Chive made a third option. The February birth flower is the primrose — the small, determined bloom that arrives before most plants have decided it is safe — and this is it in chartreuse, 3 inches, designed for a wall rather than a counter that needs clearing by Thursday.


Gift Ready Box
Ready-to-hang
30-day return policy

Product detail

  • Material: Ceramic
  • Glaze finish: Glazed
  • Mounting: Keyhole for Wall Hanging
  • Packaging: Individually packaged in gift ready box
  • Color: Chartreuse
  • Glaze Variation: Natural variation between pieces
  • Year Designed: 2025.0

Dimension

  • 3.25 inches diameter, 2.75 inches tall

How to hang & display

Wall hanging

  1. Choose your spot — works on drywall, plaster, or wood panelling.
  2. Hammer a small nail at a slight upward angle (about 30°).
  3. Slide the keyhole slot on the reverse onto the nail head.
  4. Adjust to level. Rests flat with no visible hardware.

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 →

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: Orders $200+ within the US
  • 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.

View full return policy →

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February birthday gift the dated print market called sufficient

The chartreuse primrose is an unusual color choice for a February flower, which is exactly the point. The studio just thought chartreuse was a really cool glaze they invented, so they used it here. No reason given. Most February gifting lands in pink and red. Chartreuse is for the person who has been receiving the correct thing for years and has had enough of it. It hangs with one screw in 90 seconds and stays there, being February, on whatever wall it ends up on.

Chive ceramic flowers are stocked in the Art Institute of Chicago, SFMOMA, the New York Botanical Garden, and more than 200 galleries and museum shops worldwide. The Birth Flower Collection was designed in Toronto, made by hand since 1999.

February birthday gift ideas for the person who already has flowers

The chartreuse primrose ships in a Chive gift box and requires no card explaining what a birth flower is, why chartreuse, or why ceramic. It will be on the wall at the next birthday, and the one after that. The ceramic version does not have a departure date.

Close-up detail of handmade ceramic green chartruse primrose flower petals individually shaped by artisan, Chive ceramics Toronto, no molds used

Find Your Birth Flower

One month. One flower. The only gift decision you need to make.

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


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

Birth flower gifts, designed by hand

Every Birth Flower piece begins as a sketch in our Toronto design studio. Each month's bloom is drawn from botanical tradition — not a generic floral shape, but the specific flower historically tied to that birth month, studied and refined until the ceramic holds its character. Snowdrop for January. Poppy for August. Narcissus for December. Drawn by hand, glazed by hand, made to be kept.

Birth flower gifts work because they're personal in a way most objects aren't — tied to a date, a person, a month that means something specific. A ceramic birth flower is a gift that doesn't expire, doesn't wilt, and doesn't need a vase.

These are pieces made for milestone birthdays, for mothers, for the person who already has everything. Birth flower gifts for grandma, for a best friend, for anyone worth giving something original. Designed by Todd Newgren, Chive Studio founder, over 25 years.

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

How to Hang Ceramic Flowers?

In 60 seconds or less

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.

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Chocolate mint dahlia and moss grey goyet azalea ceramic wall flowers with navy, ivory and blue ceramic flowers on white background — handmade by Chive Studio Toronto

Want a wall that tells a story?

Our design team will curate a collection styled for your space.

Fill this out and we become your ceramic flower matchmakers—minus the awkward small talk. We'll personally select pieces in our studio with the dedication of people who've made questionable life choices but excellent aesthetic ones.


Frequently asked questions

How does a ceramic wall flower hang?

The chartreuse primrose hangs with a single screw The keyhole mount on the back sits flush once hung. The process takes 90 seconds. The screw is not included — most households already have one that fits. For plaster or tile walls, a small anchor works without marking the surface significantly. After 90 seconds the flower is on the wall. This is either a selling point or it isn't, but it is accurate.

What is the February birth flower?

The February birth flower is the primrose — the early-arriving bloom that comes before most plants have decided spring is actually happening. Symbolically it represents youth and new beginnings, which means it is also, coincidentally, the flower for the coldest month of the year in most of the northern hemisphere. Chive's ceramic version is chartreuse, 3 inches, made by hand. It does not require soil, a frost-free location, or the kind of hope that makes real primroses so structurally committed.

What is a good Valentine's Day gift that isn't flowers?

A Valentine's Day gift that isn't flowers has a short list of options that don't read as afterthoughts. A handmade ceramic birth flower — specifically the February primrose in chartreuse, which is not pink and not heart-shaped — works because it is specific to the person rather than specific to the holiday. It ships in a gift box, hangs with one screw, and is still on the wall in twenty years. The Art Institute of Chicago stocks the Birth Flower Collection. That is either a useful detail or it isn't.

Is a ceramic flower a good last minute gift?

A ceramic flower from Chive ships to over 40 countries from warehouses in Toronto, Rotterdam, New York, and Birmingham. Standard shipping arrives in time for most occasions when ordered with a few days lead time. The chartreuse primrose ships in a Chive gift box and does not require additional wrapping. The gift box looks like a gift because it is one. For genuinely last-minute situations, expedited shipping is available. The flower does not know it was ordered at the last minute and conducts itself accordingly.

What makes a ceramic birth flower different from a birth flower print?

A birth flower print is flat, framed, and competes with every other print on the wall. A ceramic birth flower is a three-dimensional ceramic wall sculpture that casts a small shadow and has a glaze specific to this product — in this case chartreuse, which does not appear in most print shops. Chive's ceramic primrose is stocked in the Art Institute of Chicago's gift shop, not because the art world lacks opinions about what belongs on walls, but because it passed that standard. A print has not been asked.

What is a good gift for a friend?

A gift for a friend works best when it references something specific — their birth month, in this case, which is February, which is the primrose. The chartreuse ceramic primrose ships gift-ready, hangs in 90 seconds, and does not require the friend to find a vase or pretend the flowers are still fine on day five. It is the gift that acknowledges a specific month without asking the friend to maintain it. The Andy Warhol Museum stocks Chive flowers. Friends who find this relevant will find this relevant.

Does the February primrose come in other colors?

The February birth flower ceramic is chartreuse — this is the color confirmed for the primrose and it does not come in other versions. The Birth Flower Collection assigns one specific glaze to each month's flower, which is the point: the primrose is chartreuse the same way February is February. If chartreuse is not the right wall color, every other month in the collection has its own glaze. Eleven other options are available at the birth flower collection page.

Why is the February birth flower ceramic chartreuse?

The February primrose is chartreuse because Chive designed it that way, and because chartreuse is the color that a real primrose in a particular light actually is. It is not the color most people associate with February gifting, which tends toward pink and red, and Chive found this distinction worth making. The Birth Flower Collection was made out of spite for the dated prints and plastic currently occupying the birth flower market. Chartreuse is its own position statement. The Art Institute of Chicago has had no complaints.