canoeguide
Chumono
I'm inspired by what was accomplished with this black hills spruce holiday tree. It starts with an admittedly interesting base, but above that is pretty uninspiring and poor. Worth the watch IMO.
not inspired enough to go out and buy 5 to practice on?
Maybe good to keep in mind: Aggressive? Or deliberately invasive? I did not think of the word aggressive in his work there? It was invasive, but in a gentle thought-out manner?aggressively
Either dead or just fuller and more refinedI'd love to know what this looks like now!
Or, for that matter, any split branches on anyone's trees - they ever end up looking anything more than split branches?
would be my guess. I mean, the guy talks a lot but he is also an able bonsai professional.fuller and more refined
“Wacky, wavy, inflatable arm flailing tube man!”Personally, I've got enough material to keep me busy at the moment.
But what this video did inspire me to do is to think more creatively and aggressively about working with nursery material. Getting started as a relative noob in the last couple years, I've deliberately focused on care and horticulture and repotting and aftercare. We see a lot of people dive in with poor material, hack it to bits in the wrong season, and wire it sloppily like a waving inflatable arm flailing tube man. I even added, "Dead trees don't make good bonsai" as my signature. This video makes me want to add "... but neither do boring ones."
I still think that people should begin by focusing on keeping trees alive, but diving in and pushing cheap, replaceable material has value too. It would be a good learning exercise to buy 5 of something and go nuts.
True, I meant more the split branches themselves but I didn't specify.Either dead or just fuller and more refined