Your Cuttings Are Rooting in an Old Jam Jar
The pothos cutting sits in a cloudy glass on the windowsill, the propagation experiment looks like clutter, and there's nowhere to actually show it off. This propagation vase changes that. Clear glass bulbs cradled in a warm wooden frame turn rooting a cutting into a living display — roots, water, and stem on show like a small piece of moving art.
Why It Works
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Watch roots grow in real time — the clear glass bulbs put the whole rooting process on display, so you can track healthy white root growth and know exactly when a cutting is ready to pot on.
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Choose your scale — pick a single bulb for one statement cutting, or the double and triple stands to root several at once, so the piece fits a narrow shelf or fills a wider console as you like.
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Built from borosilicate glass — the same heat-resistant glass used in lab and ovenware resists clouding and thermal stress, staying crystal clear through repeated water changes rather than going hazy over time.
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Warm wooden A-frame stand — the natural timber frame holds the bulbs at eye level and brings an organic, considered look to a desk or shelf, so the piece reads as decor rather than a science project.
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Lift-out, tilt-to-pour bulbs — each glass sits in the frame so you can tip or lift it to refresh the water without dismantling anything, keeping cuttings healthy with minimal fuss.
It suits plant lovers building a propagation habit, renters and apartment dwellers who want greenery without pots of soil, and anyone furnishing a clean, natural-leaning desk, kitchen, or shelf. The single bulb makes a thoughtful gift, while the triple turns a windowsill into a row of cuttings in progress.
Will the Water Go Cloudy or Stagnant?
Not if you refresh it — and the clear glass makes that easy by showing you the moment the water needs changing. Lift or tilt a bulb to empty it, rinse with fresh water every few days, and keep it in bright, indirect light to slow algae and encourage roots. Wipe the glass clear when needed and keep the wooden stand out of standing water to protect the finish.
For anyone who wants their plant habit on display, not hidden in a jar — a propagation piece that turns rooting a cutting into part of the decor.