Minute Medium Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Green Blue
with drainage hole and saucer
The 5-inch Green Blue is a glazed ceramic plant pot with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer, and forty attempts is a lot of attempts for a color combination that was, by all accounts, working from the start. We kept going anyway, because green and blue together gave us more room to experiment than we expected. You can see the indecision in the best possible way, a green and a blue that clearly enjoyed each other's company through every one of those tries.
At five inches you can see some of that range still living in the final version: depth in the green, movement in the blue, the result of having had forty chances to get it exactly right and only needing about a dozen of them. Glazed ceramic holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, and no two pots settle alike. The medium size is where all that happy over-testing finally has room to show.
- Color: Green Blue
- Material: Ceramic
- Glaze finish: Glazed Ceramic
- Finish variation: Natural variation between pieces
- Drainage: included
- Saucer: Matching saucer included
- Dishwasher safe: Yes
- Indoor / Outdoor: For indoor use and covered outdoor temperate weather use
- Designed by: Chive Studio
- Year Designed: 2017
Potting Tips
- Repot in the evening.
- Wait 1–2 days after watering, then repot.
- Buy potting mix. Not backyard dirt.
- Move the top layer of soil from the old pot into the new one. It's a little ecosystem.
- Never go more than one inch bigger.
- Soil line sits an inch below the rim. Leca or small rocks at the bottom for drainage.
Which pot size for my plant? →
- Dishwasher-safe. Can also be hand-washed with warm soapy water and a soft cloth.
- Glazed pots are dipped and kiln-fired — they are sealed, durable, and not looking for trouble. No special cleaning products required.
- For pots with saucers empty the saucer periodically. Standing water in the saucer defeats the purpose of having a drainage hole, which is a thing we feel strongly about.
- Not frost-safe. Designed for indoor use and covered outdoor temperate weather use. Freezing temperatures are not recommended.
Shipping
- Free shipping: On qualifying US orders — threshold shown at checkout
- Standard: 5–8 business days Express2–3 business days (at checkout)
- International Ships: to 40 countries — rates at checkout
- Packaging Ships: in outer box to protect gift box
Returns
We accept returns within 30 days of delivery on unused items in original packaging. If your piece arrives damaged, contact us within 14 days with a photo and we will replace it at no charge.
Have a cool shop? Know someone that does?
Green Blue at Five Inches: Forty Tries, Visible
The Ultimate Repotting Guide
For those who have killed a plant. Or several. Or, frankly, many.
Before you put a plant into your new pot, you have to get it out of the nursery pot — a process that ends badly more often than any gardening influencer will admit. We wrote a full guide: when to repot (early spring, and not when you're feeling impulsive in October), which soil to use, how to tell your plant is root-bound, and how to avoid the three mistakes that kill perfectly healthy plants within a week of a well-intentioned repotting.
It is the guide we wish someone had handed us twenty-five years ago. It is written by people who have personally committed most of the errors in it.

The Same Glaze, Other Sizes

Drainage Is the Whole Point

Start Something From Seed
The San Antonio Botanical Garden Did Not Ask How the Glaze Was Made
Plant Tips from Chive Studio
Quick tips, straight answers, and the occasional reminder that overwatering kills more houseplants than neglect does.





