Minute Large Ceramic Pot with Drainage Hole and Saucer, Green Blue

with drainage hole and saucer

Regular price $38.00
Sizes
Drainage hole
Saucer Included
30-day return policy

The large Green Blue is a glazed ceramic plant pot with a center drainage hole and a matching saucer, and at full size it is what survived a genuinely excessive amount of testing. That is unusual for us to admit, but it feels honest given the scale of the experiment. Forty pots, three finalists, and this is one of them, large enough now that the combination supposedly impossible to get wrong gets to prove it was worth all the extra effort anyway. At full size the combination stops being charming and starts being convincing, the proof that easy and excellent are occasionally the same thing.

Glazed ceramic holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, and each large pot carries the green and blue its own way. Sized for a floor or a statement plant, it takes the room with the ease of a color that never once fought us. We did not need forty tries. We are glad we took them.

Product detail
  • Color: Green Blue
  • Material: Ceramic
  • Glaze finish: Glazed Ceramic
  • Finish variation: Natural variation between pieces
  • Drainage: Standard Center Drainage Hole
  • Saucer: Matching independent detachable saucer
  • Dishwasher safe: Yes
  • Indoor / Outdoor: For indoor use and covered outdoor temperate weather use
  • Designed by: Chive Studio
  • Year Designed: 2017
Dimension
  • 6 inches diameter, 6 inches tall
  • 7 inches diameter, 7 inches tall
  • 8 inches diameter, 8 inches tall

Plants that love this pot
  • Monstera
  • Ficus
  • Snake plant (Sansevieria)
  • Peace lily
  • ZZ plant
  • Philodendra
  • Dracaena
  • Chinese evergreen (Aglaonema)

Potting a Plant in a Minute

  1. Place a 1-inch layer of small stones or LECA pebbles at the bottom of the pot. Optional, but it helps with airflow.
  2. Add well-draining potting mix appropriate to your plant. Not garden soil. We know your grandmother used garden soil. She was wrong about this one thing.
  3. Transplant from the nursery pot, leaving about 1 inch at the top for watering, enough room to water deeply without overflow.
  4. Set the pot on the matching saucer.
  5. Water thoroughly until water runs out the drainage hole into the saucer. Empty the saucer once the plant has absorbed what it needs. This is the entire system.

Potting Tips

  1. Repot in the evening.
  2. Wait 1–2 days after watering, then repot.
  3. Buy potting mix. Not backyard dirt.
  4. Move the top layer of soil from the old pot into the new one. It's a little ecosystem.
  5. Never go more than one inch bigger.
  6. Soil line sits an inch below the rim. Leca or small rocks at the bottom for drainage.

Which pot size for my plant? →

Full Repotting guide →

Pot Care instructions
  1. Dishwasher-safe. Can also be hand-washed with warm soapy water and a soft cloth.
  2. Glazed pots are dipped and kiln-fired — they are sealed, durable, and not looking for trouble. No special cleaning products required.
  3. 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.
  4. Not frost-safe. Designed for indoor use and covered outdoor temperate weather use. Freezing temperatures are not recommended.
Shipping & returns

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

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 14 days with a photo and we will replace it at no charge.

View full return policy →

Wholesale Inquires

Have a cool shop? Know someone that does?

Find Chive on Faire →

Large Minute Ceramic Pots & Saucer | 6", 7" & 8" Indoor Planter - Chive Ceramics Studio - Pots - Chive Ceramics Studio

Green Blue at Full Scale: Excess, Vindicated

At full size, Green Blue is the survivor of an experiment that got out of hand in the most enjoyable way. We will admit, since the scale of the pot rather forces the confession, that we made around forty versions of a glaze that worked from the very beginning. Not because it was stubborn, but because it was generous, and we are the kind of people who, handed a color that keeps offering good options, will keep accepting them well past the point of necessity. Three finalists came out of that, and the large Green Blue is one of them, given the most surface of any size to make its case.

A big pot exposes a color completely. There is nowhere for a weak glaze to hide across that much area, and Green Blue does not flinch: the green holds its depth, the blue keeps its movement, and the combination that is allegedly foolproof proves the claim at the scale where proof matters most. Each one settles differently, the two colors negotiating their own quiet agreement every time. A center drainage hole and a matching saucer sit beneath all of it, the same dependable mechanics the smallest version has. We did not need forty tries to arrive here. We took them anyway, and at full scale we are unembarrassed to say it was worth every one.


Potting a plant with Chive

  1. It's best to repot your plant in the evening. Trust us, we know.
  2. Repot 1–2 days after watering — keeps the same rhythm going and won't shock it.
  3. Potting soil is not the dirt from your backyard. Go buy good, nutrient-rich soil.
  4. The top layer of soil in your current pot should be the top layer in the new pot too. It's a little ecosystem your plant likes.
  5. Never go more than one inch bigger than your existing pot. "It'll grow into it" is not correct, and you will kill it.
  6. Keep the soil line about an inch below the top of the pot. Add some leca or small rocks to the bottom for better aeration.
Repotting plants with Chive | Chive Studio

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.

Minute Ceramic Pot And Saucer Set With Drainage | 6, 7, & 8 inch - Chive Ceramics Studio - Pots - Chive Ceramics Studio

The Same Glaze, Other Sizes

Green Blue scales from a crowded-finalist small to a full-room statement. The large is forty tries proven across the most surface.

Shop Green Blue in 3"

Shop Green Blue in 5"

Pots with drainage by chive studio

Drainage Is the Whole Point

A center drainage hole and a matching saucer sit under the large Green Blue, the same dependable mechanics the smallest version has.

Shop pots with drainage

Shido Seeds packets styled in soil with sunlight — Chive Studio

Start Something From Seed

Before anything grows in the Minute Large in Green Blue, there are Shido Seeds, vacuum-sealed and built to keep for years. Start the plant, then choose the pot.

Shop Shido Seeds

McKee Botanical Garden Did Not Ask How the Glaze Was Made

Chive Studio designs pots and ceramic flowers, and the Minute line is where the glazes are layered and allowed to move, which means the studio discards more pots than it keeps, a fine principle and an inconvenient way to run a studio. The shapes are decided in the studio, tested against real plants, and revised until the proportions stop bothering us, which routinely takes longer than anyone budgeted for. We design everything we sell, license nothing to other manufacturers, and have never sold to a big-box retailer, which is the kind of decision that sounds principled until you see the schedule.

Botanical institutions keep choosing the work, which we credit to buyers who can tell at a glance whether an object is what it claims to be. McKee Botanical Garden carries Chive. So do the New York Botanical Garden and the Chicago Botanic Garden, where a layered glaze has to hold its own beside the plants it was made for. We ship to over 40 countries, and the glazed surface wipes clean and holds moisture more evenly than raw terracotta, which matters more than the studio's feelings about color.


Plant Tips from Chive Studio

Quick tips, straight answers, and the occasional reminder that overwatering kills more houseplants than neglect does.

How to Repot a Plant: Watch for the Linen

Todd Newgren
How to repot a plant comes down to three signs, one rule, and one soil decision that most people get wrong. Chive Studio has been making drainage pots since 1999. The neighbor i...
Read more

Are Ceramic Pots Good for Plants?

Todd Newgren
Ceramic pots for plants outperform plastic on drainage, weight, and longevity — when they have a drainage hole. Chive has spent 25 years getting that detail right, and the pots ...
Read more

Non Toxic Plants for Cats: The Complete Guide

Todd Newgren
Spider plants, hoyas, and Boston ferns are non-toxic to cats and work well as houseplants. Chive's ceramic wall flowers — stocked in the Getty Museum and over 200 galleries — ar...
Read more

Frequently asked questions

What is the Minute in Green Blue best suited to?

The Minute is a ceramic pot for indoor plants. It works well for pothos, snake plants, peace lilies, philodendrons, and small ferns and suits modern, boho, and minimalist rooms. As a large ceramic pot, the Minute fits a shelf, sill, or desk and pairs cleanly with the rest of the Chive pot range. This listing is the Green Blue colorway.

Is the Minute a plant pot with a drainage hole and saucer?

Yes, the Minute is a ceramic plant pot with a drainage hole and a matching saucer. The drainage hole lets excess water escape so roots are not left sitting in water, which is the most common cause of root rot indoors. Water until you see a little drain into the saucer, then empty it. For a ceramic pot with drainage, the Minute keeps watering simple.

What size plant fits the Minute large?

The Minute large is a ceramic pot that holds a nursery plant of a similar width, so match the grower pot to the opening rather than the mature size of the plant. Good choices include pothos, snake plants, peace lilies, philodendrons, and small ferns. For a large indoor plant pot, size up by about an inch when you repot so roots have room without swimming in soil.

Is the saucer included with the Minute pot?

Yes, the Minute ships with a matching ceramic saucer, so it arrives as a complete pot and saucer set. The saucer catches water that drains through and protects shelves and sills from rings and moisture. Both pieces are finished to match, which is why the Minute reads as one considered object rather than a pot with a random tray underneath.

Are ceramic plant pots good for indoor plants?

Yes, the Minute is a ceramic plant pot. Ceramic is fired hard, holds glaze color well, and does not break down with watering the way untreated materials can, which makes ceramic plant pots a reliable choice for indoor plants. The Minute is glazed to seal the surface, so it wipes clean and keeps its finish on a sill, shelf, or table.

How do I care for plants in the Minute pot?

To water the Minute, add water until a little runs into the saucer, then tip out what collects so roots are not left standing in it. Because this ceramic pot has a drainage hole, you can water thoroughly and let the excess go, which encourages even root growth. Check the top inch of soil before watering again rather than watering on a fixed schedule.

Is the Minute a good ceramic pot for snake plants?

The Minute is a good ceramic pot for snake plants. It drains freely, so the roots get water and air in the right balance. For anyone searching for a ceramic pot for snake plants, the Minute covers both looks and function. Match the nursery pot to the opening and the plant settles in without fuss.

Does the Minute work as a housewarming gift?

The Minute makes a practical gift for a plant lover because it is a finished ceramic pot that solves a real problem rather than adding clutter. It arrives as a pot and saucer set and suits most modern interiors. For a plant pot gift that gets used, the Minute is an easy choice, and it suits anyone building an indoor plant collection.

Shido Vegetable and Flower Seeds Vacuum sealed for peak freshness

The pot is sorted. Now what goes in it?

Shido seeds come vacuum-sealed, non-GMO, and packaged well enough that people keep the packets after the seeds are gone. Which is either a design success or a problem, depending on how you look at it.

Your new pot is waiting.