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.
Mary does not have a garden, so I supply her with most of the materials she needs for class. For this exercise we looked around the garden and found these partially dried strelitzia reginae leaves, with very interesting curls. Mary placed them diagonally in a ceramic, trough container and added two stems of St John Port creeper flowers. This arrangement could, also, fit into the theme of 'Lines at the Base'.
Wendy's class theme was 'Composition with Branches - a Two-step Approach'. In this exercise we create a structure with dried branches, which can stand alone. We then introduce a container and fresh plant materials to complete the arrangement. Below is Wendy's structure, which she created using pear branches....
..... and then she added the ceramic container, into which she had placed red roses and a palm leaf split in half.


















































