
Artificial Begonia Rex In Ceramic Pot
Begonia rex is the kind of houseplant that turns heads on Instagram and then quietly dies in most people's living rooms. It wants consistent humidity, indirect light and soil that's moist but never wet. Get any of that wrong and the leaves crisp, curl or drop. This version removes all of that entirely.
Each leaf is broad and asymmetric with deeply veined patterning that shifts from silvery green through to darker forest tones, edged with flashes of pink and burgundy along the margins.
The colour isn't uniform across the plant either. Some leaves lean more silver, others carry more of that warm reddish edge. That inconsistency is what makes it look alive.
The stems are a natural reddish-pink, rising from a bed of realistic moss in a small, weathered ceramic pot with a rough, aged finish. At 45cm tall and 65cm wide, it has real presence on a side table, bathroom shelf or bedroom dresser without taking up too much surface space.
It's the sort of plant that makes a room feel more considered. And unlike the real thing, it won't punish you for going on holiday.
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Artificial Begonia Rex In Ceramic Pot
Begonia rex is the kind of houseplant that turns heads on Instagram and then quietly dies in most people's living rooms. It wants consistent humidity, indirect light and soil that's moist but never wet. Get any of that wrong and the leaves crisp, curl or drop. This version removes all of that entirely.
Each leaf is broad and asymmetric with deeply veined patterning that shifts from silvery green through to darker forest tones, edged with flashes of pink and burgundy along the margins.
The colour isn't uniform across the plant either. Some leaves lean more silver, others carry more of that warm reddish edge. That inconsistency is what makes it look alive.
The stems are a natural reddish-pink, rising from a bed of realistic moss in a small, weathered ceramic pot with a rough, aged finish. At 45cm tall and 65cm wide, it has real presence on a side table, bathroom shelf or bedroom dresser without taking up too much surface space.
It's the sort of plant that makes a room feel more considered. And unlike the real thing, it won't punish you for going on holiday.
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Shipping & Returns
Description
Begonia rex is the kind of houseplant that turns heads on Instagram and then quietly dies in most people's living rooms. It wants consistent humidity, indirect light and soil that's moist but never wet. Get any of that wrong and the leaves crisp, curl or drop. This version removes all of that entirely.
Each leaf is broad and asymmetric with deeply veined patterning that shifts from silvery green through to darker forest tones, edged with flashes of pink and burgundy along the margins.
The colour isn't uniform across the plant either. Some leaves lean more silver, others carry more of that warm reddish edge. That inconsistency is what makes it look alive.
The stems are a natural reddish-pink, rising from a bed of realistic moss in a small, weathered ceramic pot with a rough, aged finish. At 45cm tall and 65cm wide, it has real presence on a side table, bathroom shelf or bedroom dresser without taking up too much surface space.
It's the sort of plant that makes a room feel more considered. And unlike the real thing, it won't punish you for going on holiday.
























