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Ikebana Unbound

A Modern Approach to the Ancient Japanese Art of Flower Arranging

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Named a Best Interior Design Book of 2020 by Food52
"A modern take on a centuries-old art that’s breathtakingly simple.”
—Booklist, starred review
At its heart, the Japanese art of ikebana is about celebrating an intimate connection with nature. To practice ikebana is to find inspiration in the seasons, favor unassuming blooms and branches, seek balance and simplicity, and remain fully present in the moment. It is a beautiful, pure antidote to our age of distraction and excess.
Honoring the lineage of ikebana while making the art their own, Amanda Luu and Ivanka Matsuba of Studio Mondine show us new ways to tell stories with flowers. They offer step-by-step instructions for dozens of stunning, seasonal arrangements, while in the process introducing readers to the themes and stylistic signatures of the art. In Studio Mondine’s hands, this centuries-old practice feels undeniably fresh—and readers are given the gift of learning to create unique, meaningful, and authentic arrangements.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 20, 2020
      Floral designers Luu and Matsuba’s elegant offering offers a contemporary take on Ikebana, an ancient Japanese flower arranging tradition. The book is divided into sections covering Ikebana’s four central themes: naturalness, movement, balance, and simplicity. The authors lay out step-by-step guidance for a variety of arrangements (with helpful photographs) and detail each step involved, from choosing the vase and its accoutrements to the types of plants and how to position them. Luu and Matsuba also show that Ikebana is not simply a decorative medium, but a way of using the elements of form, color, placement, and symbolism to evoke times of year and works of art. In “Naturalness,” for example, the “Cresting Wave” arrangement recalls, via strategically placed Japanese andromeda, a cascading vine of jasmine, and “Hungarian Rhapsody” daffodils takes inspiration from the classic Hokusai print The Great Wave off Kanagawa. For “Movement,” Luu and Matsuba highlight an arrangement of purple lilacs, silvervein creeper vines, and columbine, organized according to a traditional Japanese motif of “two strong principal stems crossing, moving inward,” to symbolize the transition from winter to spring. This graceful book will enable even the amateur arranger to appreciate and participate in a beautiful tradition.

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  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

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