Filtering by Category: ikebana

My Ikebana: Pussywillow And Water

Added on by the ikebana shop.

I was so excited to find these long pussywillow branches that I did not even think to choose what kind of container to use.  My mind simply started imagining what I could create with these branches.

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​The branches felt good in my hands.  I bent, twisted and coaxed them to form different shapes and angles.  I was playing and having a lot of fun!  Before long, I had an objet in front of me.

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​Next, the container.  The work turned out to be quite big so I decided to use a combination of two suiban containers.  The pussywillow branches went to the first container.  I did not want to cover the lines so I used very sparse flowers.

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​I used the second suiban to show water.  I let some alstroemeria blossoms float to show a flow from one container to the other.

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​The image of hana-ikada was in my mind.  (花筏 hana-ikada = literally "flower raft".  This term is used to describe sakura petals that fall in a pond or river.) 

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​Here is the full arrangement.

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​I hope you like it.  --Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

My Ikebana: Natural Style

Added on by the ikebana shop.

This time I made an arrangement in a more orthodox and natural style.​

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​Last week, a customer came to the shop bringing a big branch.  She said she had found it on the sidewalk.  She knew I loved getting branches!  It was that branch that I used for this arrangement.  Thank you very much!

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​I used red carnations, white pom pom mums and a sprinkling of pine.

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​See the buds?  The branches were holding out the promise of spring!

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​Here is the complete arrangement.  I imagined it would be appropriate at an entrance lobby of a restaurant or ryokan (Japanese style inn).

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We put it in our shop instead!  :-)  Sorry but we don't have a lot of space these days so it had to be together with some other things!​

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I hope you like it.  --Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

My Ikebana: Pine Needles

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The back of our house has a lot of pine trees.  The previous night's rainstorm gave me a gift of a fallen pine branch.

​Back at the studio, I stood for a long time in front of the flower container shelves but found it difficult to choose a container.  In the end, I decided not to use a container...rather, I re-discovered this piece of driftwood that had been set aside many months ago!

​I also abandoned the idea of using the big pine branch.  The needles had caught my eye.

​I rearranged them to form a mass.  I thought it'd be interesting to set it on the driftwood to look as if moss had started growing on it.  Then, I added the pine twigs (already stripped of their needles) on to the end to show movement, giving the mass of needles a lighter tone.

​Here is the arrangement...

​I hope you like it.  --Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

My Ikebana: Swirling Eucalyptus

Added on by the ikebana shop.

The idea to twist eucalyptus branches round and round came from the shape of the container.​  I thought of using only the heart-shaped one.

When I finished, I felt the arrangement uncomfortably incomplete.​

So I expanded the work using the second container.​

I used the single aspidestra leaf embedded in the eucalyptus swirls to create a connection with the second container.​

​Also with the help of hydrangea blossoms, the arrangement with two containers was now a unity.

​Hope you like it.  --Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

On The Radio

Added on by the ikebana shop.

Miyako and one of her students, Jean, were featured on a short radio documentary that was broadcast last February 7th on CKDU 88.1 FM in Halifax NS.

Here is the clip, which we put together as a slideshow.  It was too bad we were not able to take photographs during the actual interview.  (In fact, during the interview, we were not even sure what kind of piece would come out!)  So we just used some images from our archives to complement the presentation.

Many thanks to Emily Kitagawa, a student in the School of Journalism at University of King's College, Halifax NS.  You did a splendid job!

This clip was broadcast as a short radio documentary on CKDU 88.1 FM in Halifax NS on February 7, 2013. Audio clip produced by Emily Kitagawa, a student of the School of Journalism at the University of King's College, Halifax NS. Featuring Miyako Ballesteros, ikebana teacher, and her student, Jean Henshall.

Erratum: The 80 variations that the narrator talks about actually refers to the 80 lessons of the basic curriculum of the Sogetsu School of Ikebana.

My Ikebana: Fallen Maple

Added on by the ikebana shop.

Recent windy days afforded me the opportunity to pick up interesting branches that fell from the trees around Halifax.  Thank you to the snow for providing some cushion!

The dried moss gave an extra flavour to this branch.  Using it together with a thick piece of driftwood, I found a strong framework for the arrangement.

The arrangement needed a bit of colour so I unobtrusively inserted a few stems of red roses.

Since last year, I find myself creating arrangements that are more artificially "sculptured" (as opposed to using the natural shapes of the plant material.)  In this arrangement, I used the flowers not as "flowers" (i.e. not trying to show the beauty of the roses) but rather as a tool to add colour to the work.

I hope you like it!  --Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

My Ikebana: Disassembling and Assembling Salal

Added on by the ikebana shop.

I found myself with a lot of salal branches this week so I thought I'd make an arrangement featuring salal.

However, the salal leaves were quite big and would completely overpower the snapdragons that I planned to use.  So I thought of a way to show only the salal branches.  Remove the leaves!

Sometimes, by disassembling the material into its smaller parts, we discover some new characteristics.

Here is the finished arrangement.

I put the salal leaves together with the snapdragons and green hypericum so that people would know what kind of branches were used!  

I also removed the budding tips of the snapdragons because I did not want to introduce another "line" element into the arrangement.

By the way, the flower container was made by our friend, Nova Scotia pottery artist, Mindy Moore.

The holes at the top came in very handy for this arrangement!

Hope you like it.  

Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)

My Ikebana: "Sculpting" With Straw

Added on by the ikebana shop.

Our backyard is entombed in snow and it was difficult to pick branches so I decided to use some dried susuki (Pampas grass) that a friend had given to me a while back.  I had been saving them for a rainy day and I thought their time finally came.  Not on a rainy day...but on a snowy one!

Because the stalks were very dry and brittle, many stems broke completely.  It was a challenge to blend angled lines with the flower container.

I wanted to project this arrangement in 3-D.  The lines were placed such that the viewer would be able to enjoy different expressions from many angles.

The alstroemeria, though more commonly used to create mass, were used to show movement this time.  

The two colours--pink and orange--inserted on either side of the arrangement, helped to show depth.

I hope you like it.

Miyako

(All photos by the ikebana shop.  All rights reserved.)