EMILY IN TOKYO
Monday, 11 May 2026
AUTUMNAL ARRANGEMENTS
Monday, 4 May 2026
Hello all,
At our last class I had set the theme of 'Fruiting Plant Materials' for the senior students. In my arrangement, above, I used cumquats, cotoneaster berries and hydrangeas.
Bye for now,
Emily
Monday, 27 April 2026
MAGIC OF VEGTABLES
Lucy's arrangement, below, comprised of one sweet potato and some xanthorrhoea grass on a slate container.
I have a curculigo plant in my garden which has taken up too much space and I wanted to reduce its spread to make room for other plants. The stems of this material, close to the roots, have a beautiful orange colour, which is not visible unless they are dug up. So, I challenged myself to make an arrangement with them. I picked a ceramic vase with a narrow split half way down one side, into which I wedged the leaves. The orange dahlias seemed ideal to pick up the colour of the curculigo. The leaves started to wilt by the next day, as they were not in water but I enjoyed the arrangement for as long as it lasted.
I leave you with the first of my camellias to flower and my favourite - the Kamo-Hon-Ami. A very simple arrangement in a basket with a sprig of pine.
Monday, 20 April 2026
MASTERCLASS #39
Hello all,
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| Examples of the place mats |
During the class I stripped one of the placemats as an example for the students and, after the class, I thought I'd use it in an arrangement, below.
Monday, 13 April 2026
BEAUTIFUL PORT DOUGLAS
| Ruffled fan palm (Licuala grandis) |
This fan palm appeals to the dressmaker and the ikebanist in me. I’d love to use it in an arrangement and I’d also love to make a pleated skirt with it.
Hello all,
My sisters and I and our men spent 8 days in Port Douglas in Queensland. For my
overseas readers, this is a tropical part of Australia and a popular holiday
destination. Here the
vegetation is lush and vibrant, with palms, tropical foliage and brightly coloured plants creating a rich, green backdrop everywhere you look. At
Niramaya Villas & Spa, where we stayed, this is elevated into beautifully
maintained gardens—calm water features, manicured lawns and dense tropical
plantings that made the ikebanist in us swoon. In terms of flowers there are
not as many as we have down south but the myriad of colourful foliage more than
makes up for it.
My
favourite plant is the lipstick palm (Cyrtostachys Renda) with its scarlet to bright red stems and contrasting, green
foliage.
The dry, black material in the arrangement below, is an inflorescence, which fell to the ground, most conveniently for me. It came from the grey coloured palm (Bismarckia Nobilis). The rest of the materials are heliconia - leaf and flower and some unfamiliar, green leaves. I used thread from my sewing kit to tie the inflorescences together and managed to position them at the top of the vase.
In the second arrangement, I bent a long, heliconia leaf and added a mass of brightly coloured foliage at the back and some cream coloured ixora chinensis at the front. I placed a plastic water bottle inside the vase into which I placed the stems, so that the materials did not rest on the sides of the vase.
Another plant in great abundance and which fascinated me is the beach spider lily (Hymenocallis littoralis)
We took a number of walks after dinner, when it was quite dark but the strategic lighting of the trees and shrubs gave an otherworldly feeling. The weather was perfect! During the day there are very pleasant sea breezes but at night all is calm and balmy, with only the sounds of night creatures in the trees.
We enjoyed a number of indulgent meals. The photo, below, is of the six of us having lunch at Osprey restaurant in Thala beach. If you’re traveling that way, I highly recommend it.
| Sisters three - Emily, Lucy and Vicky |




































