We were provided with a bowl,
and then a kenzan, a bed of needles used for placing the flower pieces, placed in the center of the bowl,
with the bowl being filled with water for the purpose of keeping the flowers hydrated.
The instructor first did a demonstration for us, picking out from different branches and flowers to make his piece.
He first placed the shin piece after cutting it to the appropriate length,
then proceeded to cut the holly, removing the fruit,
to serve as his soe.
He then used a pine branch to serve as his tai,
going through a few variations to show us the concepts involved.


It was then time to make our own work of art. We had a lot of material to choose from,
and I finally came up with this piece of work,
Although I had to have several changes done
until my instructor was finally happy with my work.
Another point the instructor wanted to show us, was regardless of whether we started with the same materials, different people will come up with different creations, as shown below.
With that, our lesson ended. I was very disappointed when we were told that we could only bring our flowers home and not the bowl or the kenzan, especially because of the cost of the class. It defeated the whole point of me making the art piece, as I had wanted to give it to someone else. Overall, I somehow cannot get a feel for appreciating this type of art, as it looks bare most of the time in my opinion, and it is also hard to transport. Overall, I don't think I will do Ikebana artwork again.
After leaving the place, I decided to go grab a late dinner at Snappy Sushi nearby. This place looks decent on the first floor, though a little rundown in the basement, where I ended up sitting. I was half expecting the same mediocre menu I saw online, but apparently they now serve ramen and steamed buns as well. With that, I decided to try the 4 different steamed buns, namely the Gobo Veggie (shredded burdock root, carrot, cucumber, lettuce, sweet soy sauce, sesame seeds, shichimi togarashi), the BLT (bacon, roasted tomato, mozzarella, fried onion, lettuce, wasabi mayo, dijon mustard vinegar), the Salmon Cake (baked salmon cake, lettuce, sliced cucumber, sweet basil, sesame gochujang oil, balsamic glaze, wasabi tartar sauce), and the Pork Char Siu (lettuce, cucumber slices, shredded leek, mustard vinegar, wasabi mayo, sweet soy) buns. For my ramen, I got the Spicy Lobster Paitan Ramen (butter steamed lobster tail, anchovy soy sauce, red hot miso, shichimi togarashi, leek, kimchee, wood ear mushrooms, baby arugula). I decided to get one sushi roll as well, getting the Samba de Shino Roll (avocado, cucumber, eel, and flying fish roe with torched salmon on top, dressed with Snappy Sushi’s original pineapple salsa (tomato, red onion, cilantro) and microgreens), as well as a teapot of Green Tea.
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Green Tea |
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Samba de Shino Roll |
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Spicy Lobster Paitan Ramen |
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Clockwise from top left: Gobo Veggie, BLT, Salmon Cake, Pork Char Siu |
With that, I headed home for the night, thankful that my car had not been towed as I had left it while it was still illegal to park there with 10 minutes left to go before it became legal.
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