So it went on with the little twisted yew. I have to admit that the overall design is a bit boring
at that stage of development yet. The crown appeares too routinely and does not suit well to the
contorted trunc. I wil fix that in autumn this year.
Welcome to my blog.
This blog will show the development of some of my raw-material-yamadoris.
I am a fool for linden, but I also like to work with other native species as well ...
So it went on with the little twisted yew. I have to admit that the overall design is a bit boring
at that stage of development yet. The crown appeares too routinely and does not suit well to the
contorted trunc. I wil fix that in autumn this year.
A Juniperus Squamata Blue Star (?) i acquired in March 2020 in an old nursery as raw-material. Since the tree had an utterly useless structure to be developed as a bonsai, i decided to select one of the two trunc-lines (posting of Septembre 2021).
Now i decided to follow this path of reduction. After a heavy bending of the trunc had been done the second time, i selected, wired and formed the needle-pads and sat the branch-strutcure.
I wanted an overall shorter and slender tree with less branches than before, hence the more elegant appearance.
My favorit front-view:
And another viewing-angle :
For my taste this little Taxus baccata var. repanda had been to wide (pictures in posting as of 12.2020).
For that resaon i decided to make a complete makeover of the tree's design, cause the dimension led to a
very young appearance of the yew. Now i like it better. The jins will be reworks in a couple of weeks.
I worked on that yew in company with my-Bonsai-Companion Jens. That was great fun ...
The front?
Better?
A taxus baccata i acquired from a bonsai-fellow. The tree originally came from Poland.
From the beginning this yew had been strong and healthy and went during my possession through two
winter-saisons without any difficulties.
The deadwood-work has to be improved and the overall shape is still a little bit too unrefined yet.
Well, i am not unsatisfied with the development after two years ...
I like this front-view:
Or rahter this one?
A Chamacyparis obtusa i acquired in a small nursery as a fairly neglected bush.
The leafs of this particular cultivar are very brittle, so not easy to style this specimen wtihout losses.
The first styling-session therefor had its "collateral-damages" ...
The bark of the trunc is very mature.
Since this hinoki-cultivar is growing very slowly i consider the tree to be pretty old.
Over all the plant is a bit to dense (as always in my Hinoki-projects) to keep the energy.
I look forward to reduce the design in future as well as improving the ten-jin, if not removing it ...
My front-view:
Another possible front-view:
And the source-plant as rawest material.
I tried to show the status quo blended into the former dimension of the
bushy scrub :
The second Tanuki project. Again a wooden Thuja occidentalis base and two Juniperus blauwii specimen
connected to the trunc.
And yes, the bleached wood of the trunc is looking awfully unatural.
The weathering will be going to correct that by the time ...
My front-view :
You maybe remember the beginnings of my tanuki-projects from November 2022?
Here is how it went on with the first combination of a thuja-base "merried" to
two Juniperus nursery-plants.
My front-view :
Backside-view: