EMILY IN TOKYO
Monday, 22 June 2026
22ND JUNE, 2026
Monday, 15 June 2026
MASTERCLASS #31
Hello all,
Walking down the street yesterday I found some bark from a gum tree lying on the ground. I picked up one piece and brought it home. It was one of those times when an arrangement almost makes itself. Placing the camellia branch took some effort but, by and large, it was an easy arrangement.
For the recent Masterclass, as before, I provided three different types of materials to each student and instructed them to use as much or as little as they wished.
Angie secured a rather heavy pine branch (pinus radiata) in a ceramic container and added two proteas. She took care to place the materials to the left, leaving clear space to the right of the container.
Monday, 8 June 2026
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| Side view showing the forward movement |
Monday, 1 June 2026
One of the left over branches had an interesting line, begging to be used. I placed it, together with a rose in a vase that has no opening at the top but two openings, on either side of the neck.
Monday, 25 May 2026
Hello all,
I have an olive tree of which I'm not particularly fond for two reasons. Firstly, it doesn't produce many olives (my husband, who comes from Kalamata, had visions of jars filled with marinated olives) and, secondly, I don't find it useful in ikebana because the leaves grow in all directions and they have a very distinct underside.
However, when I had a close look at some of the branches I was trimming away, I noticed the branch in the arrangement, above, which had potential for ikebana. After careful trimming, I was left with a branch with beautiful movement.
Then the challenge was to find floral material to put with it. At this time of year there are not many flowers in my garden but I do have some rather straggly chrysanthemums. I placed them in a small mass with their stems following the curve of the olive branch. The glass vase is a much prized gift from my daughter and son-in-law.
A few weeks back, to my great delight, my pot of heamanthus coccineus produced five flowers. It's always a challenge using these flowers in ikebana because they have a short stem. I chose two matching, curved containers into one of which I placed the flowers in graduating heights. In the other container I placed sansevierias in graduating heights and finished off with the addition of a wisteria vine, sprayed white.

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| Photograph curtesy of Lei Wang |

















































