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Frances Palmer: An Interview with the Ceramicist and Flower Aficionado

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Frances Palmer is an art historian who, over the past few decades, has come to make enduring art herself: handmade ceramics that straddle the line between delicate and functional, refined and rustic. Her instant classics are coveted and collected by those in the know (including tastemakers like Martha Stewart and the late Nora Ephron), and they’ve been shown and sold internationally at galleries and exhibitions. But if you take a look at her Instagram page, you’ll find that she has another obsession that may just rival her love for the potter’s wheel: flowers. When she’s not crafting vases, plates, and bowls in her studio (next to her 1860 federal-style house in Weston, Connecticut), she’s likely puttering around her tennis court-turned-flower garden. In fact, her second book, out May 2025, is “dedicated to the subject of flowers in my work,” she tells us.

Below, Frances shares the natural bug spray recipe she uses on her roses and citrus plants, the garden books she treasures, and more. (And if you’re in London, be sure to check out her latest exhibition, Pedestal Considerations, at the Garden Museum from October 8 through December 20).

Photography courtesy of Frances Palmer.

Above: At work in her airy studio.

Your first garden memory:

Sitting in a dogwood tree at the edge of our yard where I grew up in Morristown, New Jersey. My neighbor grew many roses, but I wasn’t allowed into her garden to see them, so I would sit in the tree and gaze at them from above. I always felt like Rapunzel yearning to get in and smell the buds. In our garden, my mother grew peonies, tomatoes and zinnias, very practical but not as alluring as the forbidden roses.

Garden-related book you return to time and again:

Christopher Lloyd’s In My Garden: The Garden Diaries of Great Dixter and Vita Sackville West’s Some Flowers.

Instagram account that inspires you:

@montgomerphoto; @nicholascullinan; @charlestontrust; @gardenmuseum; @floretflower; @bayntunflowers; @oakspringgardenfoundation.

Describe in three words your garden aesthetic.

Voluptuous blooms in what she calls
Above: Voluptuous blooms in what she calls “The Round Garden” on her property.

Exuberant. Functional. Somewhat chaotic.

Plant that makes you swoon:

So many—fritillaria, tulips, bearded iris, roses, peonies, dahlias.

Plant that makes you want to run the other way:

I can’t think of one. All flowers have something redeeming about them and one must be open to learning what that is. Maybe more commercially produced flowers don’t have as much soul as home- or farm-grown ones?

Favorite go-to plant:

Dahlias from Frances
Above: Dahlias from Frances’ garden, in bud vases from her kiln.

I love bearded iris, roses, tulips, rudbeckias, amaranth, zinnias and dahlias.

Gardening or design trend that needs to go:

I think that people are finally learning to garden without pesticides and how to strive for healthy soil.

Old wives’ tale gardening trick that actually works:

My friend Connie taught me a natural spray for roses and citrus: juice of 2 lemons, 2 tablespoons of potassium, 2 tablespoons of cayenne or cinnamon, 1 liter of water—and spray over the leaves. Good for fungus and bugs.

Hardest gardening lesson you’ve learned:

Frances
Above: Frances’ famous tennis court garden. See Steal This Look: An Old Tennis Court Turned Kitchen Garden for more photos of its ebullient raised beds.

Every gardening year is different and things can be out of your control. It is most important to be kind to yourself and the flowers and try again the next season.

Favorite gardening hack:

I love to fill in bare spots in the garden with coleus. They spread out quickly and add lots of late season color.

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