EMILY IN TOKYO
Monday, 26 January 2026
HAPPY AUSTRALIA DAY
Monday, 19 January 2026
19TH JANUARY 2026
I cut the seed heads of arum italicum pictum in the arrangement, above, not because I feared the weather but because, as soon as the seeds ripen to an orangy/red colour, the birds eat them. I'm hoping that, with time, they will change colour in the container. The leaves I used with them are aspidistras cut in half lengthwise.
Monday, 12 January 2026
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| Close up of blue necked flowers |
Monday, 5 January 2026
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Hello all,
Next to the cypress trees there are two casuarinas, which have some very interesting stems. I used two of them in the arrangement, below, after trimming them very heavily to reveal the stems. I teamed them with my altissimo roses, which are not doing all that well this year, much to my chagrin!
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| Closeup of individual flower |
Bye for now,
Monday, 29 December 2025
CHRISTMAS 2025
| Our charming hosts. |
Below is the floral arrangement that Madeline asked me to make for the dining table. I used cedar branches, cockscomb (Celosia Argentea), hydrangeas, nandina domestica seed heads and poppy pods sprayed gold.
| George and Dennis - experts in the preparation of Gyro |
| Sisters three - Vicky, Lucy & Emily |
Lucy, in her second arrangement, used a dried branch, sprayed white, a hydrangea, a small conifer branch and a number of Christmas baubles and beads.
With Christmas over, here's to a safe, healthy and very happy New Year for all.
Bye for now,
Monday, 22 December 2025
Hello all,
As it was our final lesson for the year last week, I had set the theme of a Christmas Arrangement for the whole class not just the seniors. The photograph, above, is of one of my arrangements. The silver material is xanthorrhoea and I chose it because it reflected the texture and colour of the container. The rest of the materials are red celosias or cockscombs, alstroemeria psittacina leaves and phalaenopsis orchid.
The arrangement, below represents the first verse of the popular Christmas carol - The twelve days of Christmas.
I was asked how I could bear to sacrifice so many fruit for the sake of an arrangement. My answer is it's either that or they get eaten by birds. Despite being small and quite unripe, many have already been eaten.
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| On the first day of Christmas my true love sent to me... |
Deb, who is only in Book 2, enjoyed doing her first freestyle arrangement. She used some pincushion flowers (leucospermum) and mizuhiki in this unusually shaped container.




















































