I am pleased to report that this spring the "Lorraine Lee" Rose is looking the best it has ever been. I think it is a combination of the weather and the protective guard which I attached to the base of the support structure. The guard protects against predation by possums, which particularly like the tender new shoots and leaves when they are just forming.
ROADSIDE IKEBANA
GREEN AND GOLD
TAMARISK and DUTCH IRIS, KABUWAKE
I had set the senior students the task of making a spring-time ikebana incorporating metal. Aileen's botanical material was Jasmine and the metal, wire mesh. She folded the wire mesh to make a convoluted form that appeared to be floating. The mesh provided a framework that supported the very light vine. The lines in the mesh echoed the design on the small vase.
Eugenia used two pieces of welded reinforcing rods that she wired together to create a larger structure. They were secured to a triangular ceramic ikebana vase to which the botanical material was added. Eugenia chose Sea Holly Eryngium for its strong straight lines and angles that harmonised well with the metal and the vase.
Marisha chose a rather challenging metal material, aluminium foil. This material when spread out as a sheet does not have enough strength to support its own weight. However, with experimentation it proved to become self supporting when formed into a flattened cone and crushed slightly at its tip. Her botanical materials are small pink multi-headed Chrysanthemums and two rich pink roses.
My neighbour Margie, who is an excellent gardener, recently allowed me to cut some of the blue Dutch Irises Iris X hollandica growing in her garden. Her blooms were straight and tall. My single bloom this year was horizontal as were all the leaves. I have these bulbs growing in a trough and you would think I placed them in a wind tunnel. I need to find a much more sheltered position before next spring.
I have also been keeping my eye on a couple of large bushes of Tamarisk Tamarix ramosissima, which had just started to flower. The irises and the tamarisk were two interestingly contrasting materials that I wanted to arrange together.
The number of branches and flower stems made me decide to use two kenzans when arranging them. This is the Kabuwake,(two groups) style, which is characterised by the creation of a space between the groups. I was particularly attracted to the tallest branch as it had a slight, rather angular, "S" bend; so I placed this stem first. The branch itself needed to be placed on the right-hand side so that its 'front' was facing forward. While adding the second group, I had to pay attention to the created space as well as the overall balance of the ikebana. The irises provide a high focal point and harmonised with the blue suiban.
I took the above photo against a black backdrop as it seems to give a more accurate colour.
Here is the ikebana in the living room niche.
11th October 2025
WISTERIA AT LAST
I challenged my senior students in Geelong recently by asking them to bring two vases and material for one ikebana arrangement. I then chose which vase would be used and gave it to one of the students. I then gave the botanical materials to a different student. In this way, none of the students had their own materials or vases, and none of the materials being used were chosen with that vase in mind.
Ellie was provided with a small spherical vase in which she arranged green materials only, from the selection she was given. She arranged the Grasstree Xanthorrhoea so that it formed a cone with the apex in the vase. Behind the conical screen she placed two Green Goddess Lilies Zantedeschia; then placed a single green Lily low at the front of the arrangement.
Helen was given a tall narrow vessel. Her material included a large fern-like leaf and some pink Grevillea. She cut most of the side stems from one side of the leaf and placed it forward. The Grevillea was then massed at the mouth of the vessel partly obscured by the leaf.
Jo received some pink flowering Prunus branches, perhaps a plum. She also had some large round leaves Bergenia cordifolia, I think. The lines of the branches made it very difficult to arrange in the shallow vessel, as the branches tended to curve in contrary directions.
Maureen was given some tortuous Willow Salix, a Eucalyptus branch with gumnuts attached and a large pink incurve Chrysanthemum. Her vessel was placed with a forward opening aperture. The pink chrysanthemum was set forward and low in the arrangement, and was embraced by the other materials.
ONE KIND OF MATERIAL
Helen used Cycad as her material which she set in old disused ceramic insulators from electric power poles. The three intersecting "cones" (strobili) are arranged in a criss-crossing design. The insulator at the left-rear contains a small number of individual leaflets taken from the larger frond-like bipinnate leaves of the plant.
Ellie arranged two stems of green Cymbidium orchids from her garden and two leaves. The placement of the flower spikes creates a diagonal dense line which is contrasted by the finer line of the strappy leaves. She has used three matching bottle-shaped vessels.
PAYING ATTENTION TO THE CURVE
At the beginning of the week, Laurie and I went to Cape Schanck on the southern tip of the Mornington Peninsula. It is on the eastern side of Port Phillip Bay, an area of Victoria I had never visited before.
Here is a clearer view of the tip of the Cape, which is approached by a series of staircases and a long wooden walkway.
Another delight was to come across this bright white Clematis. I think it is C. glycinoides. The flowers are larger than the pale cream C. microphylla which grows in our garden.
BANKSIA ERICIFOLIA
A recent exercise I set for my Torquay students was to "take into account the colour of the vessel" when making their ikebana.
Lynn used a shallow trough-shaped vessel which had a mustard- coloured glaze. I think the material on the left of the arrangement is one of the subspecies of Grevillea juniperina, which has yellow flowers, that picked up the colour of the glaze. The other material is not identified. Her arrangement used two strong lines which she crossed creating an interesting form, with space beneath the branches emphasised.
Eugenia used a large Monstera Monstera deliciosa leaf with interesting colouring as a result of it beginning to wilt. She cut a large section off one side to create a strong line from the central rib of the leaf. Because this leaf was so dominant she added only two New Zealand Flax Phormium tenax leaves which had harmonising colour as a result of sun damage.
My ikebana this week was made for a demonstration I gave to a small group of Japanophiles on the Surfcoast. After initially demonstrating some ikebana with northern hemisphere plants, I then made the above ikebana using Australian native materials. The fresh material on the left side is a trimmed branch of Banksia ericifolia which has three new-season flower spikes. There is also a single spike from the previous season in the centre of the ikebana that has begun to form seeds. On the righthand side, a dried Moonah Melaleuca lanceolata branch curls around the vessel.
The vessel is by the New Zealand ceramicist Elena Renker.
14th September 2025