“Weddings should never feel cold, even in winter,” says Claire Marie Johnston, owner of Flowers Claire Marie in San Francisco. Her aesthetic, though modern, isn’t sterile: She favors romantic arrangements that brim with garden-fresh varietals.
Johnston is also known for surprise touches that complement her designs, such as bowls of candy and pink sea salts. “I’m big on the little things that make guests feel appreciated,” she says.
Eddie Zaratzian of long time bbrooks member Tic-Tock, in Los Angeles, CA, has recently joined forces with Restoration Hardware and is offering a lovely holiday promotion.
Floral Designer Laura Dowling’s arrangements combine a just-plucked quality with a refined modern aesthetic.
She is fond of using various shades of a single hue and containers wrapped in materials such as moss or leaves to heighten the drama. She layers materials freely, incorporating unexpected elements, such as fruits or vegetables, bundled twigs, or horsetail bamboo cut into pieces and tethered with twine.
Her role as Chief Floral Designer at the White House has her innovative arrangements contributing a new brand of chic to historic rooms.
A bulb, when purchased, is an underground root structure in its dormant state. Made up of layered flesh, like an onion, it holds a shoot inside. Once planted, a bulb stays dormant until the Spring sun warms and softens the soil, causing the roots to grow. The roots take in nutrients and water from the damp Spring ground, and the shoot pushes up through the bulb’s papery top layer. (Bulbs also contain “lateral” buds, which eventually form new plants.) After the flower blooms and fades, the dying leaves feed the bulb, which makes the bulb strong for the next year. When the weather tuns cold, the bulb goes dormant again.
( As seen in October 2011 issue of Real Simple magazine- written by Madaline Sparks– Illustration by Wendy Hollender)
For more information on bulb plants, including forcing different varieties, please see www.realsimple.com.
Flowers and landscapes are at the heart of Ori Gersht’s mesmerizing photographs. …Except… he blows them up… Quite literally!
For his 2006 series “Exploding Flowers,” the Tel Aviv–born, London-based artist worked with a florist to create elaborate bouquets inspired, he says, by Henri Fantin-Latour’s lush 19th-century still lifes. Gersht clicked the camera’s shutter as each bouquet was ignited with a small explosive. The resulting photographs are gorgeous and a little unnerving; the artist describes them as “celebratory and violent.”
Gersht’s career is exploding too. A graduate of the master’s program at London’s Royal College of Art, the photographer is on a creative tear. This past summer alone, Gersht had solo shows at CRG Gallery in New York and at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. Meanwhile, he continues to travel throughout Europe and beyond to shoot new photographs and short films, including a video he made at a bullfight in Andalusia, which was part of a group exhibition organized by Ron Arad at London’s Roundhouse.
To read more please see Elle Decor, October 2011 issue.
Mistletoe, or Phoradendrum Seritonum, has been a symbol of love and fertility for thousands of years, having once been used in Druid ceremonies and then evolving into “kissing balls” in 18th century England - under the mistletoe kissing ball, it was bad luck for a lady to refuse a gentleman’s kiss.* While we don’t advocate forcing your object of affection to kiss you under the threat of a years’ worth of bad luck, hanging mistletoe in doorways is a long-standing tradition. Tack sprigs of it outside your front door on New Years’ Eve to welcome the new year and guard against evil spirits like the Celts, or hang it above a newborn baby’s crib to prevent fairies from snatching him and putting a changeling in his place – new holiday mamas take note!