A flower brick is a type of vase, cuboid-shaped like a building brick, and designed to be seen with the long face towards the viewer.[1][2]
Traditional flower bricks are made of a ceramic material, usually delftware or other tin-glazed earthenware.[3][4][5][6][7] The top surface has a large hole into which water is poured, and a number of smaller holes into which flower stems are inserted, so that the flowers are kept in position. These vessels are a sub-type of the boughpot or tulipiere, which have more rounded shapes.[3] Flower bricks are thought to have been the most common vessel for flowers besides vases in the 18th century.[7]
Some scholars suggest that flower bricks may have been used as quill holders and inkwells during the 17th century, although this is debated.[6] There are few surviving pictorial representations of these objects in use during the 17th or 18th century.[6]
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