Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Forum for discussion of Pines, Junipers, Cedar etc as bonsai.
Post Reply
eliass
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 231
Joined: December 23rd, 2011, 10:44 pm
Bonsai Age: 0
Location: Melbourne

Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Post by eliass »

This is by far my favorite part of this hobby put some work into this cedar last weekend... It has some good age to it..

Always keen on opinions, needs refining and the apex is a little shabby..

Before
Image

After
Image
User avatar
Boics
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 2189
Joined: September 27th, 2012, 6:16 pm
Favorite Species: Banksia, Syzygium, Cotoneaster. Leptospermum
Bonsai Age: 7
Location: Victoria Inner City Fringe
Has thanked: 28 times
Been thanked: 17 times

Re: Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Post by Boics »

Looks good.
Some moss or nice topsoil and a better photo with clean background will further compliment your good work.
One of the fabulous things about growing bonsai is as you get old and decrepit your trees get old and beautiful
Scott Roxburgh
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 1399
Joined: November 27th, 2008, 12:37 pm
Favorite Species: Pine, Maple, and Juniper
Bonsai Age: 8
Bonsai Club: Canberra Bonsai Society
Location: Canberra
Has thanked: 31 times
Been thanked: 25 times

Re: Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Post by Scott Roxburgh »

Nice start and rework.

Did you under cut the branches that you bent down? I have never been able to get the branches to stay where I want them on Cedar.

Is the chalk at the front a proposed shari? I'd give it a couple of seasons of refinement before putting that into it, I think it could be nice without it.

Maybe along the lines of Boon's Blue Atlas?
BIB-11th-Boon-AtlasCedar.jpg
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
eliass
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Aussie Bonsai Fan
Posts: 231
Joined: December 23rd, 2011, 10:44 pm
Bonsai Age: 0
Location: Melbourne

Re: Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Post by eliass »

Thanks for the comments guys.

I cracked most branches while bending, I think the Shari will be needed as it provides the illusion of taper..

Scott thanks that's a great example of what I would like to achieve..

Cheers Boics will post some photo post repot..
Bonsaitrees (Craig)
Banned
Banned
Posts: 49
Joined: December 17th, 2012, 1:40 am
Bonsai Age: 0
Location: perth

Re: Himalayan Cedar Initial Styling

Post by Bonsaitrees (Craig) »

Hi,

Nice start, if you do decide to go ahead with the Shari keep in mind that it Needs to Have reason. With a Shari generally starting from a broken limb, broken Apex and travelling downwards as if the branck/apex took a slice of live tissue and pulled it down , stripping the bark etc to eventually leave a deadwood Shari.Adding movement to Shari can also help disguise taper .
If a shari starts at the bottom it still deserves reason for being there, be that it was burnt out from fire, an area of roots died and caused an upwards shari of the trunk or maybe the trunk was split from a major event and opened up(split apart) which caused the upwards shari which continues to force itself skywards because of the imense pressure now at it's base from the Split. Food for design though. :2c: cheers.
I am the serial pest Craig Murray. Nice to meet you.
Post Reply

Return to “Pines and Junipers”