Monday, 11 May 2026

AUTUMNAL ARRANGEMENTS

 


Hello all,

This is a gorgeous time of year for ikebanists in Melbourne, with its temperate, oceanic climate which features crisp, sunny days, mild temperatures (although you wouldn't think so the last few days) and stunning colourful foliage. So I set the theme of an autumnal arrangement for the advanced students.

Of course, I went to town with it. When I have an abundance of materials and the ideas that go with it, I can't resist making many arrangements. Often I don't have enough surfaces to display them and they just sit on a studio table.

The arrangement at the top of this post is an attempt to make something more contemporary. The brown bits on the gymea leaves gives an autumnal feel as do the hydrangeas, which are white when fresh but change to this pink blush as they age. This arrangement also fits into the themes of 'Colour of the Container' and 'Shape of the Container'.

The one, below, is quite large - about 1.2 metres across. The branches are persimmon and, because they were so big, I needed the large mass of sunflowers. The last element is amaranthus.


The next arrangement doesn't have an obviously autumnal look but, I feel, it is because this is the season for both elements. This, also, fits with the theme of 'Seasonal Materials'

This was a particularly difficult arrangement to make. I needed a container that could support the heavy fruit. This, resin one, holds enough water to give that balance. The challenge was to secure the heavy branches without resting on the oval ring at the top. It took some 'engineering' to achieve it.


Vicky, true to form, made another large arrangement. Her materials were ornamental grape vine and oriental lily buds. The tall, glass vase is coloured, thus concealing the stems inside.


Lei used ornamental grape vine, smoke bush, Virginia creeper and chrysanthemums in a tall basket.


Lucy was away from class but, as a keen ikebanist, she made an arrangement at home and sent me the photo. She took a unique approach to this topic. She collected oak leaves and glued them together in a sculptural design. She added two umbrella plant leaves as the fresh material. Poor Lu!  She used a hot glue gun for the job and burnt her fingers in the process. The things we do for ikebana!!


Mary used two containers. In one she placed a persimmon branch with a pronounced curve, unfortunately lost in the photograph. In the second container, positioned far at the back, she placed the chrysanthemums, reaching forward in the space created by the stem.


Last week I received a bunch of red roses, sent to me for my birthday by a friend in Germany. I was quite delighted. I made two arrangements. In the first I used a small section of a large philodendron leaf (philodendron maximum) and placed the roses in a row in a contemporary style.



The second arrangement started with the strelitzia reginae leaf that had a natural tear. Also, being a young leaf, it had a red spine, which picked up the colour of the rose. I placed a single rose peeking behind the tear of the leaf.


And now for this week's camelia arrangement.


Bye for now,
Emily




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.

And, since my pomegranates were ready to pick, I couldn't resist making some more arrangements. Fruiting branches lend themselves mostly to naturalistic arrangements but I wanted to challenge myself to make a more modern one, below. I removed all the leaves from the pomegranate branches and placed them in this quirky, footed container. I had to place some metal weights into the container to counter the heavy fruit. I, also, employed some serious mechanics to ensure that the branches did not rest on the edge of the container. The small mass at the opening is made up of cathedral begonia leaves.



In the next arrangement I used a creeper that I was not able to identify and cathedral begonia leaves with the pomegranates.



Vicky used three, newly acquired, metal vases, into two of which she placed fig branches. She brought along dahlias but chose not to add them to the arrangement and I agreed with her.


Nicole used mainly branches of cotoneaster, the berries of which were not quite ripe, hence the orange colour instead of red. The colour, however, was ideal to go with her Paul Davis vase as well as the nandina domestica nana.


Cymbie used kefir lime branches, from which she, painstakingly, removed all but a few of the leaves. She chose a double container but used only one side. The dahlias added the floral focus and colour.


Mary, also, chose kefir lime branches in a nageire container. Her floral focus were the white lisianthus.


Dianne's class theme was 'Arrangements for Special Occasions'. She chose to depict the winter solstice as she has a friend who has a birthday around that time. Her materials were - a bare but still fresh branch, nandina domestica nana and hydrangeas. She used a heavy, ceramic container with a split down the middle.


Wendy's class theme was 'Relief Works'. Her aim was to depict fire works, having painted her board blue and her dried agapanthus in shades of yellow, orange and red, representing the exploding fire works.


And, again, I leave you with a camellia arrangement.


Bye for now,

Emily





Monday, 27 April 2026

MAGIC OF VEGTABLES

 


Hello all,

Our recent Ikebana International workshop was led by Lara Telford with the theme 'Magic of Vegetables'. She had one arrangement already set up when we arrived and demonstrated three others using special, retro containers from her collection.

I made the arrangement at the top of this post. I had arrived from our holiday the night before the workshop and had little time to shop for materials. I chose the leeks because I liked their geometrical form. I added the kiwi vine to contrast that form. I did attempt to add some colour with chilies or cherry tomatoes but, I felt, they were superfluous. 

I had, also, picked a bunch of Dutch carrots but didn't use them until after I came home from the meeting. Unfortunately, their green tops had wilted in the meantime, so, I replaced them with sprigs of parsley


Lucy's arrangement, below, comprised of one sweet potato and some xanthorrhoea grass on a slate container.


Jenny chose to use 5 different materials, forming a sculptural design in a ceramic, trough container.



In a previous post I mentioned that I planned to attend The Dahlia Society of Victoria 2026 Show. Well I did and I shopped!! I've been rewarded with some stunning blooms. The photo, below, is of Dahlia Ken's Gala, which I wanted to showcase in an arrangement.


At first I was pleased with the arrangement, below. However, looking at it from a teacher's point of view, I felt that the container dominated too much, when what I wanted was to showcase the flower...


...so I tried a couple of other iterations. The first with a NZ flax leaf and the second with a strelitzia reginae leaf split in half.



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.


Bye for now, 
Emily




Monday, 20 April 2026

MASTERCLASS #39

 

Hello all,

A friend of ours, Angie, gave us a large number of place mats in different colours, suggesting that we might use them in ikebana. Well, I thought it was a great idea for our Masterclass. I gave each student two place mats together with 3 other, plant materials. They were to select their own container.

I made the arrangement at the top of this post using place mats, spent agapanthus and nandina domestica nana.


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.


Lei cut out the centre of one of her place mats and rested it on a trimmed monstera leaf bringing two gerberas through the hole of the place mat, behind the leaf.



Lei, having finished early and having some materials left over, made a second arrangement, below.


Vicky stripped the leaves from the Siberian Dogwood branch (Cornus Siberia alba) and used all of her allocated materials in a rather large container with a small opening.


Cymbie used the two place mats but only one of her NZ flax and one of her Gerberas. The unusual container is made of resin and, I suspect its original use was as a candle holder.


She, too, finished early and had a leaf and flower left over. She made a second arrangement by stripping the flax leaf and placing it and the gerbera in a container in the shape of rings. This arrangement addresses the exercise 'Paying Attention to the Shape of the Container.



Akemi cut up one of her place mats in a very intricate design of triangles. She stripped the leaves from the weeping willow and created curved lines, which then, created spaces. She placed her two, spent agapanthus behind the place mat and the two gerberas at the front.


Bredenia had two branches of cotoneaster berries, from which she, too, stripped the leaves. She, then, placed them in a stainless steel trough. She cut up the place mat and rested it on the branch. She added two, spent agapanthus flowers to the back and the two gerberas at the front.


Lucy' tall arrangement began with a pine branch (pinus radiata), which took some doing to secure in the correct angle in the tall vase. She then added the place mats and the two hydrangeas in between the two mats.


I'd like to make two points here. Firstly that, when using an unconventional material, it should be the main focus of the arrangement and not something to be added on like 'decoration', to quote Kawana sensei.

And secondly, I've observed over the years that, when we have the opportunity to make a second arrangement, after our main exercise is done, the arrangement is often better than the first. I believe this is because the pressure to perform is off, our minds are open and we are able to take more risks.

Oh, one more thing - I'm very proud of the work my students produced.

Bye for now,
Emily



Monday, 13 April 2026

BEAUTIFUL PORT DOUGLAS

 

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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.


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On our first foray into the town I was quite taken by this shrub with rather large, jasmine-like flowers. Thanks to AI, I was able to identify it as Wrightia antidysenterica.


I managed to resist the temptation to use some of the abundant materials for ikebana. However, on the last day I gave in. The villa in which we stayed has a garden, which backs onto some boggy ground. I cut some materials from the very back, where it would not be noticed and created two arrangements using vases which were at the villa.

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.

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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. 

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Another plant in great abundance and which fascinated me is the beach spider lily (Hymenocallis littoralis)

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 I took the photo, below on one of my solitary walks through the compound. It took me about half an hour during which I saw no other person. These geese were my only companions. 

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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.  

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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. 

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Sisters three - Emily, Lucy and Vicky
Bye for now,
Emily



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