Regina Leader-Post

Setting up home terrariums has become a nightclub event

- TRACEE M. HERBAUGH

At a crowded, downtown bar one recent Saturday night, the lights were dim, hip-hop music played and most everyone had a drink in hand. The bar itself was covered with succulents, and the tabletops with accoutreme­nts like paintbrush­es, plastic spoons and planters of potting soil. The crowd was here to learn the craft of terrarium building.

“Now, these succulents are very hard to kill, I promise,” said Lindsay Webber, the effervesce­nt 28-year-old instructor of the class on terrariums. “You’ll only have to water them once every two weeks or so, and they only need a squirt or two of water.”

The two-hour lesson, called Plant Nite, was part of a program that started in Boston in 2015 and has spread to 32 states and Canada. It’s operated by a company called Paint Nite that capitalize­s on the do-it-yourself movement and a clientele willing to pay for an ex- perience — such as a primer on building terrariums.

These miniature landscapes are encapsulat­ed in containers made of blown glass, ornate clay pots or a variety of other materials.

“I started getting into gardening a few years ago, and that’s when I saw these things (terrariums), getting popular,” said Diandra Escamilla, a 28-year-old Boston resident who attended Plant Nite. “I was seeing them everywhere, on social media — my friends started having them, so I started to get interested.”

Terrariums are hot. Many major retailers — not just gardening stores like Home Depot — are selling them. Some Ikea and West Elm stores, for instance, have offered build-your-own kits full of electric-coloured rocks, tiny animal figurines, moss and popular succulents — hearty plants adapted to live with little light or watering. Likewise, terrariums have a devoted following on many social media websites, such as Pinterest, Twitter and Facebook, where plant-lovers exchange pictures, ideas and opinions of the miniature glass gardens.

The latest terrarium trend took off in the beginning of the decade, according to Maria Colletti, author of Terrariums — Gardens Under Glass: Designing, Creating, and Planting Modern Indoor Gardens.

“Everyone thought it would be a phase and even drizzle away,” Colletti said.

That wasn’t the case.

Colletti, who teaches classes on terrarium building through the New York Botanical Garden’s adult education department, said terrariums’ portabilit­y and low maintenanc­e makes them greenery mainstays that are here for the long haul.

“What could be better for an office or home to have a bit of nature where we view our miniature green world every day of our lives?” she said.

“As our electronic digital world’s requiremen­ts increase, terrariums remind us of the larger wonder of the planet we live on, Earth.”

For Swetha Ramachandr­an, 28, of Boston, who attended Plant Nite, a terrarium’s appeal is simple.

“They ’re cute,” she said, matterof-factly. “And I like the containers they come in.”

 ?? TRACEE HERBAUGH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A DIY terrarium created at Plant Nite at a bar in downtown Boston.
The container garden is feeling the love as people get in touch with their inner gardeners.
TRACEE HERBAUGH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A DIY terrarium created at Plant Nite at a bar in downtown Boston. The container garden is feeling the love as people get in touch with their inner gardeners.

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