Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade...

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Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet

Transcript of Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade...

Page 1: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Informal Upright Bonsai

Brian Van Fleet

Page 2: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Formal Upright

Slant

Informal Upright

Semi-Cascade

Cascade

The Basic Bonsai Styles

From “Bonsai Techniques II” by John Y. Naka

•Styles are caused by natural or implied growing conditions

•Style names are dictated by trunk shape

•Infinite variants are possible, but will generally fit into these categories

Page 3: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

• Radial Nebari• Good trunk taper from base to apex• Strong first branch, sets “tone” of

tree, emerges at 1/2 to 1/3 the height of the tree

• Second branch higher than first branch, on opposite side of tree

• Third branch is at back of tree• Apex is balanced above base

• Graceful, or dynamic trunk movement

• Branches on outside of curves

Photos: “The Step-by-step Guide to Growing Bonsai” by Colin Lewis

Formal Upright DefinedInformal

Page 4: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Informal Upright “Rules”

The differences between Formal and Informal are subtle…can you identify them?

Page 5: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Informal Upright “Rules”

• Roots should radiate out from the trunk at an even level, and taper gently into the soil

• Trunk tapers as it ascends• Branches emerge at the

outside of bends• Branches taper from trunk

distally; movement repeats trunk movement

• Branches become thinner as they ascend, and move from parallel to more perpendicular to the soil

Page 6: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Examples•Radial Root System

•Cylindrical, well-tapered trunk

•Apex balanced over base to provide sense of stability

Rule Breaker? Opposed branches…

Page 7: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Examples•Cylindrical, well-tapered trunk

•Apex balanced over base

•1, 2, 3 branch pattern

Page 8: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Examples•Radial Root System, powerful base

•Cylindrical, well-tapered trunk with movement

•Apex balanced over base

•First branch sets “tone” for tree

•Branches on the outsides of curves

Page 9: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Examples•Radial Root System

•Cylindrical, well-tapered trunk

•Apex balanced over base

•1, 2, 3 branch pattern

Rule Breaker? “Eye-Poke” branch…

Page 10: Informal Upright Bonsai Brian Van Fleet. Formal Upright Slant Informal Upright Semi- Cascade Cascade The Basic Bonsai Styles From “Bonsai Techniques II”

Breaking the “Rules”•Crossing Roots

•Low #1 branch

•#2 branch is 2 branches that emerge from the same side, and to the back

•Main branch is 3rd branch up

•Branches at inside of curves

•Trunk takes dynamic, inconsistent bends toward the top

•BUT…it works…