Living with air plants A beginner's guide to growing and displaying tillandsia

Yoshiharu Kashima

Book - 2018

Air plants require no soil-- just some spritzing, soaking, the right sunlight and good air circulation. The they work in just about any space! Discover everything you need to know, from basic cultivation and creative display. If you despair of ever being able to keep a houseplant alive, these are the plants-- and the book-- you need. -- adapted from jacket.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

635.965/Kashima
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 635.965/Kashima Due May 1, 2024
Subjects
Published
Tokyo : Tuttle Publishing [2018]
Language
English
Japanese
Main Author
Yoshiharu Kashima (author)
Other Authors
Leeyong Soo (translator)
Item Description
Translation of: Hajimete no ea purantsu : sodatekata kazarikata.
Includes index.
"Air plant reference guide."
Translator information: page 96.
Physical Description
96 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780804851046
  • The characteristics and charm of air plants
  • Terms used for parts of air plants
  • Cultivating air plants
  • The fun of displaying your air plants
  • Air plant reference guide.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Kashima, a botanist, and Matsuda, a garden writer, offer a helpful guide to ornamental air plants-species capable of drawing most of the nutrients they require from the air-that's so beautifully photographed it's nearly guaranteed to turn casual page-turners into rabid fanciers of the family Tillandsia. Especially appealing are the reference and source guides in the last of the book's three sections, which picture 118 air plants-notably including the rare T. "Peru Inca Gold," the aptly named T. ionantha "Fat Boy," and the fine-leaved T. andreana. As the authors explain, Tillandsia come big or small, tiny or trailing, wispy or abundant, with only silver or green leaves. Most of all, they are easy to care for: just a spritz of water (absorbed through the leaves), ventilation (no closed terraria, please), and a splash of sunlight filtered through an obstruction like lace curtains (don't burn those leaves). After laying out the characteristics and charm of air plants, Kashima and Matsuda delve into rooting, flowering, and displaying, explaining how to use air plants on a tablescape, as a welcome bouquet at the door, wired to a limb, or flying on a mobile. Tillandsia beginners and experts alike will be encouraged and delighted. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved