Sweep begins with raw terracotta and asks one question: how little can be added before something becomes more than it was?
The answer is a dry brush loaded with white, dragged diagonally across the body in loose, unhurried strokes. The paint barely lands — it catches on the highest points of the clay surface and skips the lower texture, leaving the terracotta visible through every mark. Up close, the warm orange-red clay reads through the white in streaks and gaps. From across the room, the surface reads as a warm blush — neither fully terracotta nor fully white, but something in between that changes with every shift in light. The generous curve from rim to base gives the brushstroke room to travel, and the simplicity of the form ensures the surface gesture is the only thing to look at.
Each Sweep is individually dry-brushed. The density, direction, and coverage of the white strokes varies piece to piece — no two are identical. This is the nature of the technique, not a quality concern. Available as a set of three nesting sizes or can be picked up individually (each comes with a drain hole at the base), each carrying the same diagonal wash scaled to its proportion.
Large: 38cm dia × 32cm H · Medium: 30cm dia × 24cm H · Small: 24cm dia × 18cm H
Care & Placement
Indoor and covered outdoor only. The dry-brushed white is a surface application on raw terracotta — avoid direct rain and standing water which will mark the body and may lift the white over time. Clean with a dry cloth only; do not use water on the surface. The white strokes may soften slightly with age — this is the piece finding its patina, not deteriorating. Single base drainage hole. Always use a saucer indoors.
Best Paired With
| Mood | Plants | Light & Water | Setting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warm & Organic | Peace Lily, Golden Pothos, Philodendron | Medium indirect · every 5–7 days | All sizes · living room, covered verandah, entrance foyer |
| Earthy & Grounded | Sansevieria, ZZ Plant, Jade Plant | Low–medium indirect · every 10–14 days | All sizes · home office, corridor, covered balcony |
| Soft & Considered | White Anthurium, Aglaonema (silver), Spider Plant | Medium indirect · every 5–7 days | Medium & Small · bedroom, dressing table, café counter |
Find Your Pairing
| Plant | Match | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Peace Lily | ✓ Perfect | White bloom echoes the dry-brushed white · warm clay below · always use saucer |
| White Anthurium | ✓ Perfect | White on warm terracotta — the composition is immediate and needs nothing else |
| Golden Pothos | ✓ Perfect | Gold-green against warm clay — the most effortless pairing in the Argil range |
| Sansevieria | ✓ Strong | All sizes · structural upright form against the gestural brushstroke body |
| Aglaonema (silver) | ✓ Strong | Silver-green leaf echoes the white brush marks naturally |
| Philodendron | ✓ Strong | All sizes · lush trailing foliage softens the raw surface |
| ZZ Plant | ✓ Strong | Low-light · glossy dark leaf against warm matte clay |
| Spider Plant | ✓ Strong | Trailing green and white mirrors the two-tone body |
| Jade Plant | ✓ Strong | Compact · structural · effortless against raw terracotta |
| Monstera Deliciosa | △ Possible | Large only · bold foliage works but can overpower the subtle surface |
| Cactus | ✗ No | Single specimen lost in the wide bowl · Sweep demands generous planting |
Beena’s Curating Tips
Sweep is the most approachable piece in the Argil Collection — the dry-brushed white softens the rawness of the terracotta without hiding it. If a customer loves raw terracotta but wants something slightly more finished than Fern, Cord, or Bail, Sweep is the recommendation.
The diagonal brushstroke is a directional detail — it reads as intentional and considered from every angle. When styling, place Sweep where the diagonal can be seen from the primary viewpoint: the direction of the stroke should feel like it’s moving toward the plant, not away from it.
White plants against the terracotta-and-white body is the most resolved composition for Sweep — Peace Lily, White Anthurium, or a cluster of white-edged Spider Plant. The white in the plant and the white in the brushstroke create a conversation without matching.
The dry-brushed white will develop a gentle patina over time — the strokes may soften and the terracotta may deepen slightly with age and humidity. Communicate this to customers as the piece finding its character. A Sweep planter that has been lived with for a season is more beautiful than a new one.
Sweep pairs naturally with Bail in the same space — Bail’s complete smoothness and Sweep’s gestural surface create a quiet dialogue between two raw terracotta pieces at opposite ends of the Argil spectrum. Same material, entirely different character.





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