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Lucy used seven different materials in an Ikenobo style container which elevated her arrangement, adding to the feeling of lightness.
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Lucy used seven different materials in an Ikenobo style container which elevated her arrangement, adding to the feeling of lightness.
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| Photograph curtesy of Lei Wang |
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| Photograph curtesy of Lei Wang |
Lucy Papas' installation was quite large and, being at the end of the stand, was also viewed from the side. She used a very big, ceramic pot as her container and employed some serious mechanics to ensure her heavy materials were secured in place. She created geometrical shapes with sprayed, corky elm branches to reflect the shapes in a kaleidoscope and created brightly coloured fans with flat pieces of wood. Large branches of pine (pinus radiata) swept to the front and the back and very tall sansevierias added height. The rest of the floral material added colour and mass.
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| Front view |
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| Side view |
Bye for now,
Emily
Vicky used bark and a dried piece of contorted hazel (Corylus avellana Contorta), which she placed over the top of her ovoid, ceramic container. She was able to fit the Oriental lily stems through the small opening of the container.
Vicky, too, was quite prolific, making three arrangements but I've included only two of them here. Actually, I'm happy to include the girls' second arrangements because we had many absences and I would have been short of content for this post.
Vicky's material was bleached branches, which look like matsumata but are not. She secured the branches behind the container and placed the dahlias inside it at the front.
Lucy was absent from class because she was fighting some kind of bug and didn't want to expose us to it. Very considerate! The conscientious ikebanist that she is, she made an arrangement at home and sent me the photograph. She used the same kind of bleached material as Vicky, placing it outside of the ceramic container and added 2 variegated NZ flax leaves and a mass of crucifix orchids.
..... and then she added the ceramic container, into which she had placed red roses and a palm leaf split in half.
The arrangement, below, almost made itself. The crucifix orchid broke off from the parent plant and fell and, looking around for something else, also with a curve, I picked the hydrangea. Back in the studio, running my eye over the shelves, this container seemed an obvious choice.
For our first regular class of the year I wanted to get us all back to basics, so I set Variation no. 8 as the class theme for the advanced students. In this arrangement we create one moribana and one nageire arrangement, then place them together.
Below is my variation No. 8. I used viburnum opulus branches and hydrangeas. The nageire was Variation no. 4 slanting style and the moribana was the basic upright style, reversed.
Bye for now,
Emily
Hello all,
This afternoon we attended the Sogetsu Victoria meeting and workshop. Christopher James led the workshop, demonstrating three different arrangements on the theme 'Glass Containers'.
I made the arrangement, above, using two, rectangular, glass containers. I created triangular shapes with umbrella grass stems and placed them inside and outside of the large container. In the smaller container I placed a small number of triangles and a small anthurium, creating depth in an otherwise flat looking arrangement.
The arrangement, below, was made by Lucy in this unusual, glass decanter, which has a pointed bottom designed to sit in a silver base, which holds it upright. However, it is much more interesting to use it lying down, allowing it to swing creating movement. Lucy used only dietes leaves, in and out of the container.
You may remember the arrangement, below left, from last week's post. I was quite pleased with it at the time. However, after two days and with the pernicious effect of gravity, the materials collapsed, below right.
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| Original arrangement |
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| After two days |
So, reminding myself of the old proverb about lemons and lemonade, I reworked the materials in a nageire container, allowing the droopy agave to be accommodated.
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| Final arrangement |