Tag: terrariums

  • Tuesday, February 3, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Eastern (but recorded) – Follies of Empire: Miniature Ruins and the Victorian Terrarium, Online

    Stories of horticulture and garden-making are often bound up with stories of empires. From the global trade in plants and the economic imperative behind botanic gardens to the acquired status and symbolism of certain plants and the realities of human exploitation, this series will explore the myriad ways in which economic and political power has influenced the seemingly commonplace activities of gardeners.

    This January 8-part online series from The Gardens Trust picks up themes and ideas from the Gardens and Empires conference presented in June 2025 by English Heritage and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in association with the British Library. Some of the speakers from the conference will be expanding on the topics they presented, and additional researchers have been invited to share their perspectives. The series will focus on European empires and will examine their global impact and influence on plants and gardening. We will explore issues from the perspective of both the coloniser and the colonized, of individuals and institutions, of the past and continuing legacies today – and will see both the triumphs and cruelties inherent in the stories around empires, plants and gardening.

    This ticket link is for the series of 8 talks at £56 or you may purchase a ticket for individual talks, costing £8. (Gardens Trust members £6 each or all 8 for £42). There will be an opportunity for Q & A after each session. Ticket holders can join each session live and/or view a recording for up to 2 weeks

    Talk number three will take place at a slightly different time than the other sessions, on February 3. First popularized by landscape gardeners of the eighteenth century, artificial ruins ranging from Gothic cathedrals to Classical temples had evolved into staples of British horticulture by the nineteenth century. Tiny versions of these follies were in turn developed for Victorian terrariums, where they sanctioned indoor gardening as a legitimate mode of horticulture by eliding it with Romantic art and literature. This talk will explore how miniature ruins additionally reveal the ways in which Britain’s pre-industrial past was evoked to validate its colonial present, bestowing an ancient pedigree upon the botanical spoils of overseas plant collecting. Culled from the tropics to the poles, the plants that adorned terrarium ruins in Victorian parlors became living emblems of Britain’s imperial reach, mapping the empire’s vast geography onto domestic interiors.

    Lindsay Wells is an art historian based in Los Angeles. Her research explores the visual culture of imperialism, gardening, and botany across the British empire. She received her PhD in art history from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and has held postdoctoral fellowships at the Getty Research Institute and UCLA. She is currently a Barbara Thom Postdoctoral Fellow at the Huntington Library, where she is completing a book on Pre-Raphaelite painting and colonial plant collecting. Her essays on nineteenth-century horticulture have appeared in several journals, including recent articles on tobacco and rhododendrons for Literature Compass, and Victorians: A Journal of Culture and Literature.

    This session will be chaired by Dr Louise Crawley of English Heritage.

  • Saturday, February 8, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm Eastern – All About Terrariums and Vivariums, Online

    Discover how to design your own terrarium or vivarium with Christopher Satch, plant scientist and award-winning exhibitor at the Philadelphia Flower Show. Through lecture and demonstration, he’ll discuss how to set up a simple, easy care terrarium, how to create an automated climate-controlled vivarium, and everything in between. This New York Botanical Garden online class on February 8 from 11 – 1 is $50 for NYBG members, $55 for nonmembers. Register at www.nybg.org

  • Saturday, January 25, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm – Make a Terrarium Garden

    Terrariums are fun way to learn about indoor gardening and easy to maintain. During this Sweetbay Flowers and Gifts class on January 25 at 2 pm you’ll choose easy to care for mini plants to design your own little plant eco-system. You’ll also learn how to properly take care of your new container garden. We’ll be getting our hands dirty so dress appropriately.

    Cost per student ($65) includes instruction and all materials. Register at www.eventbrite.com. Sweetbay Flowers is located at 478 Main Street in Wakefield.

    *Please note this class takes place on the second floor of our building and requires going up a flight of stairs. All ticket sales are final, but may be transferred to someone else after purchase.

  • Monday, November 12, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm – Terrarium and Wine Night

    Join the Boston Center for Adult Education at 122 Arlington Street in Boston on Monday, November 12 for the BCAE Terrarium and Wine Night. Sit, relax, enjoy some wine, and flex your creative muscle by designing and crafting your own terrarium – the perfect centerpiece, desk decoration, or thoughtful home made gift. Instructor Jimmy Guzman will lead the way.

    Jimmy N. Guzman, M.S. possesses an impressive breadth of experience in the hotel, catering, floral, and events industries having performed executive roles for various firms in and around Boston. His background includes: General Manager of a hotel and restaurant, Retail Manager for Winston Flowers‘ two acre flagship property in Chestnut Hill, Operations Manager for Off the Vine Catering, and Sales & Marketing Manager for an event design firm.  JNG Event Consulting grew out of Jimmy’s immense desire to assist industry professionals with all aspects of event execution as well as to provide consultation on how to market their firms. Jimmy’s love of design and his love of people, lend passion to his work and he is able to contribute his expertise to events of all sizes.

    $32, plus a $25 materials fee. For more information visit https://bcae.org/product/terrarium-and-wine-night-11-12-2018/

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  • Saturday, November 11, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm, and Sunday, November 12, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Terrarium Show

    Terrariums capture miniature living worlds within glass walls. View stunning terrarium displays from professionals and amateurs alike, at the Terrarium Show at Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive in Boylston, on Saturday, November 11 and Sunday, November 12. Free with Admission to Tower Hill Botanic Garden. For complete details visit www.towerhillbg.org. If you would like to enter a terrarium in the exhibition, please contact Kirsten Swartz at kswartz@towerhillbg.org. Terrarium entries should be dropped off Friday, November 10th, and picked up Monday, November 13th.

  • Saturday, January 29, 12:30 pm – 2:30 pm – Open Top Terrarium

    On Sunday, January 29 from 12:30 – 2:30 at Tower Hill Botanic Garden, learn how to plant, and maintain, a miniature garden in a bowl. Plant an attractive 8″ open-topped glass container with a selection of decorative slow-growing plants, then design a landscape for your indoor garden. Choose from a selection of polished stones, river pebbles, sea glass, shells, lichen covered twigs and decorative mosses to create a living picture that will delight your eye all winter long. With a little water and occasional pruning, your open terrarium will give you many months of pleasure. Please be sure to bring a pair of floral scissors to class. All other materials included. THBG members $60, nonmembers $75.

    Betsy Williams teaches, lectures and writes about living with herbs and flowers. A gardener and herb grower since 1972, Betsy trained as a florist in Boston and England. She combines her floral and gardening skills with an extensive knowledge of history, plant lore and seasonal celebrations. Betsy is the author of several books on the uses and stories of herbs and flowers. She has appeared on the Discovery Channel and greater Boston cable stations as well as local and national radio talk shows. Betsy lectures and teaches locally and nationally.

    Register online at www.towerhillbg.org.  Image from www.27east.com.

  • Saturday, November 22, 11:00 am – Terrariums: Gardens Under Glass

    Instructors Virginia Orlando and Candace Atchue of Seed to Stem will give a class at Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive in Boylston, on Saturday, November 22, beginning at 11 am, on Terrariums: Gardens Under Glass.  Create a lush terrarium in a beautiful glass vessel.

    Seed to Stem is a small gift shop located in the city of Worcester, Massachusetts. More than just a gift shop, Seed to Stem is the creative culmination of two artist’s ideas to create a unique shopping experience like no other. Seed to Stem is owned and operated by Virginia Orlando and Candace Atchue, who started a multitude of projects together in 2003. The shop itself celebrates the beauty and perfection of the natural world, boasting unusual botanicals, terrariums, natural objects, curiosities, home accessories, antiquities and more. These two women carefully craft each unique terrarium and piece of botanical art in the shop, as well as curate each item they carry with a discerning eye. Virginia and Candace have been influenced by the natural world, travel, art and design, and the stories antiques carry with them. Their obsession with the juxtaposition of the beauty of life as well as in death is prominent throughout their shop. They hope that by connecting people with nature, they can help them further connect with their own selves, and back to their roots.

    All materials are included in the fee, which is $110 for THBG members, $125 for nonmembers.  Register online at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Thursday, January 30, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – BYO Container Terrarium Class

    Lindsey Swett, owner of niche urban garden supply, located at 619 Tremont Street in the South End, will hold a BYO Container Terrarium Class on Thursday, January 30, from 7 – 9 pm.  Bring in that glass vase that’s been collecting dust on your shelf, or grab one there.  The class will cover the basics of constructing terrariums.  The $50 fee will cover all materials except for the plants and vase if you need to buy one.  To register, visit www.nicheboston.com, or call 857-753-4294.  Image courtesy of Improper Bostonian.

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  • Monday, February 25, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Bring the Rainforest Indoors: Terrariums

    The Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts will sponsor a Horticulture Morning on Monday, February 25, from 10 – noon at South Church, 41 Central Street in Andover.  The speaker is Wanda Macnair, past president of the Buxton Branch of the American Begonia Society, on the subject Bring the Rainforest Indoors: Terrariums.  Ms. Macnair is active also in the New England Chapter of The Gesneriad Society. She is a member of the Nomenclature Committee, and the Amateur Horticulture Committee of the New England Spring Flower Show. She writes a column entitled “A Passion for Plants,” for the Lincoln County News, Damariscotta, ME. For complete information call 781-237-0336 – office hours are 9 – 2, Tuesday through Thursday, or email gcfm@verizon.net.

  • Thursday, October 11, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Planting a Terrarium

    Lee Patterson is past president Noanett Garden Club, Past Chairman of the Amateur Horticulture Competition, and a winner of many blue ribbons and major awards at regional flower shows for her beautiful terrariums and miniature landscape containers (see below). In this October 11 Thursdays at the Hort presentation, Lee will give a demonstration on planting a terrarium which will inspire you to go right out and make one yourself. Presentations will begin at 7pm and go until all questions are answered. The classes are priced at $12 for members and $15 for non-members unless otherwise indicated. There is no need to pre-register and you may pay at the class. For more information visit www.masshort.org.