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  2. Create a Stunning Japanese Maple Bonsai Tree with This ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/create-stunning-japanese...

    Training. To manipulate the habit of the bonsai, wrap copper or aluminum wire around branches after the tree has resumed growth in spring. Bend the branches into the desired shape, removing the ...

  3. Bonsai cultivation and care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai_cultivation_and_care

    For bonsai, both ground layering and air layering can create a potential bonsai, by transforming a mature branch into the trunk of a new tree. The point at which rooting is encouraged can be close to the location of side branches, so the resulting rooted tree can immediately have a thick trunk and low branches, characteristics that complement ...

  4. Deadwood bonsai techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadwood_bonsai_techniques

    A Tanuki-style tree at a bonsai show. In tanuki bonsai, a living tree is joined to an interesting piece of deadwood to create a composite in the driftwood style. The deadwood usually has the form of a weathered tree trunk, or at least its lower portion. To add living material to the deadwood, a groove or channel is first carved into it.

  5. Bonsai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai

    It places the bonsai at a height that allows the viewer to imagine the bonsai as a full-size tree seen from a distance, siting the bonsai neither so low that the viewer appears to be hovering in the sky above it nor so high that the viewer appears to be looking up at the tree from beneath the ground. Noted bonsai writer Peter Adams recommends ...

  6. Chrysanthemum bonsai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysanthemum_bonsai

    Chrysanthemum bonsai forest style at the Nagoya Castle Chrysanthemum Competition 2017. Chrysanthemum bonsai (Japanese: 菊の盆栽, romanized: Kiku no bonsai, lit. 'Chrysanthemum tray planting', pronunciation ⓘ) is a Japanese art form using cultivation techniques to produce, in containers, chrysanthemum flowers that mimic the shape and scale of full size trees, called bonsai.

  7. Goshin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goshin

    At the time, Naka had seven grandchildren, each of which was represented by a tree. At the urging of fellow bonsai artists, he named his composition; he called the bonsai "Goshin", meaning "protector of the spirit", in reference to the forest shrine that inspired it. By 1973, Naka had eleven grandchildren, and he augmented Goshin concordantly. [2]