Seeing them as I came and went over multiple days, I found myself studying the components. At first I was put off by the mix of what I think of as fancy tropicals (the red ginger, Alpinia purpurata I believe, and Anthurium) with more pedestrian Alstroemeria and (gasp!) Hydrangea. They just don't belong together!
But why not? My garden is a mix of plants from far flung places, and I don't mind that mix up. The colors and textures of the flowers certainly work together—and it's not like they stuck daisies in the mix. The more I questioned my aversion the more I started to warm to the combination.
Here's another, smaller, version with the addition of Moluccella laevis (bells of Ireland), and maybe Eustoma in the center? The larger arrangement feels intentional, where as this one kind of had the look of being made of leftovers. I certainly don't mean that as a bad thing.
There was a florist, Floral Masters, in the building, off to the side on one of the escalator levels. Surely these must be their work? They weren't open when I passed by.
There were several open seating areas spread throughout the lobby, typically there were groups chatting, or solo folks working. Remarkably, all the tables had flowers...
A ceiling reflection.
Looking a little to the left we could see a tiny slice of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains between Century Square (the building with the curved tops) and Rainier Square, the dark building with the setbacks. Can you make out the dark dot on the far right side top of the curved glass of Century Square? That's a person. Cleaning the glass? Doing a repair? Dunno, but I do know you couldn't pay me enough to be that person.
The Bit at the End
Do you know the word solastalgia? I just recently learned of it. Coined by Glenn Albrecht and derived from solacium (comfort) and algia (pain), it represents the loss of solace from a changing home environment. Wikipedia says: "Solastalgia is a form of emotional or existential distress caused by negatively perceived environmental change." If you're curious there's further explanation on the Climate Psychiatry Alliance page; here.
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All material © 2009-2026 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.
The flowers are a nice touch. I like the leftover comment - the day after Thanksgiving is the best! Hell no to the window guy in the sky. I had to peek at solastalgia on Wikipedia -I hadn't heard of it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great place to have a florist shop - it has built-in customer traffic! I loved the first arrangement and wouldn't hesitate to mix an Anthurium with Hydrangea flowers (if I could grow the latter). The bee hives were surprising but appreciated; however I had to wonder if anyone afraid of bees has complained about having them nearby. I've been stung by wasps but never honey bees despite continuous close interaction with them.
ReplyDelete