Hajimete.
Vessel, gravel, charcoal, substrate, two cuttings, and a folded card of instructions. Begin somewhere, this is the kit I'd give a beginner.
- Vessel
- Glass vessel, gravel, charcoal, substrate
- H
- 16 cm
- Ø
- 12 cm
- Plants
- Grower's choice, two cuttings
- Substrate
- Gravel, charcoal, substrate included
- Edition
- OPEN
- Care
- Instructions included · indirect light
From the workshop.
Studio W9 · London
Hajimete means 'for the first time.' It's the kit I wish existed when I started, no guesswork, no wasted plants, just what you need and clear instructions for using it.
Every cutting is selected the morning kits are packed, so what arrives is never more than a few days out of the propagation tray.
The instruction card is deliberately short. Most beginner kits over-explain; this one trusts you to follow four steps and watch.
Other specimens.
View catalogue →Hikari, in glass.
A closed cloche of moss, sphagnum and lichen, sealed in May. Settles into its own weather over weeks; the glass clouds with condensation in the morning and clears by midday.
Mizu no oto.
A hand-blown sphere holding selaginella and a single fern frond, suspended over water-dark gravel. Named for the sound condensation makes against the glass at night.
Mori no kage.
Reindeer moss and a single oak leaf, pressed flat and set behind glass in a hand-finished oak frame. The forest's shadow, kept still.