Oxford - 23 Piece Curated Set
If Cambridge whispers, Oxford declaims—not loudly, but with the unmistakable authority of someone who's been right for approximately eight centuries. Twenty-three ceramic blooms compose this substantial collection, curated for those who understand that true academic ambition requires walls worthy of the endeavor.
This is where the full spectrum of contemplative color reveals itself: olive greens and chartreuse meet avocado and jungle tones, grounding the collection in natural philosophy. Pewter blues dance with grey greens and moss grey, while violet blue and blue noir provide the kind of depth found in shadow-filled cloisters. Navy anchors it all with doctoral gravitas, punctuated by dewberry richness and oatmeal neutrality. Blush pink and peach mocha offer unexpected warmth—because even the most serious scholars need moments of tenderness. Latte softness completes the palette like cream swirling into strong coffee during marathon thesis sessions.
Twenty-three pieces means this isn't dabbling—this is committing to an aesthetic with the kind of conviction usually reserved for declaring a major. Each bloom arrives in its own pretty box with a keyhole for wall hanging, transforming any space into something that feels earned rather than purchased.
For maximalists who prefer their excess intellectual rather than garish, and anyone who's ever looked at a blank wall and thought "this needs the gravitas of a don's study, circa 1897."
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Oxford - 23 Piece Curated Set
Oxford - 23 Piece Curated Set
If Cambridge whispers, Oxford declaims—not loudly, but with the unmistakable authority of someone who's been right for approximately eight centuries. Twenty-three ceramic blooms compose this substantial collection, curated for those who understand that true academic ambition requires walls worthy of the endeavor.
This is where the full spectrum of contemplative color reveals itself: olive greens and chartreuse meet avocado and jungle tones, grounding the collection in natural philosophy. Pewter blues dance with grey greens and moss grey, while violet blue and blue noir provide the kind of depth found in shadow-filled cloisters. Navy anchors it all with doctoral gravitas, punctuated by dewberry richness and oatmeal neutrality. Blush pink and peach mocha offer unexpected warmth—because even the most serious scholars need moments of tenderness. Latte softness completes the palette like cream swirling into strong coffee during marathon thesis sessions.
Twenty-three pieces means this isn't dabbling—this is committing to an aesthetic with the kind of conviction usually reserved for declaring a major. Each bloom arrives in its own pretty box with a keyhole for wall hanging, transforming any space into something that feels earned rather than purchased.
For maximalists who prefer their excess intellectual rather than garish, and anyone who's ever looked at a blank wall and thought "this needs the gravitas of a don's study, circa 1897."
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
If Cambridge whispers, Oxford declaims—not loudly, but with the unmistakable authority of someone who's been right for approximately eight centuries. Twenty-three ceramic blooms compose this substantial collection, curated for those who understand that true academic ambition requires walls worthy of the endeavor.
This is where the full spectrum of contemplative color reveals itself: olive greens and chartreuse meet avocado and jungle tones, grounding the collection in natural philosophy. Pewter blues dance with grey greens and moss grey, while violet blue and blue noir provide the kind of depth found in shadow-filled cloisters. Navy anchors it all with doctoral gravitas, punctuated by dewberry richness and oatmeal neutrality. Blush pink and peach mocha offer unexpected warmth—because even the most serious scholars need moments of tenderness. Latte softness completes the palette like cream swirling into strong coffee during marathon thesis sessions.
Twenty-three pieces means this isn't dabbling—this is committing to an aesthetic with the kind of conviction usually reserved for declaring a major. Each bloom arrives in its own pretty box with a keyhole for wall hanging, transforming any space into something that feels earned rather than purchased.
For maximalists who prefer their excess intellectual rather than garish, and anyone who's ever looked at a blank wall and thought "this needs the gravitas of a don's study, circa 1897."






















