TACOMA — In a small store window in downtown Tacoma, there’s an unusual landscape. Strewn across hot white sand like abandoned objects on a “Star Wars” planet sit a Bulbosa air plant, lime-green moss and a large quartz crystal. Nearby is a tiny forest, with lush ferns, lichen, lemony Scotch moss and, arching over everything, a curly ram’s horn. As in, from a sheep.
It’s the window of Moss + Mineral, a design store/art gallery where Tacoma artist Lisa Kinoshita has lately discovered the old-fashioned art of making terrariums — tiny gardens inside glass containers. Only she’s giving them a spin that 19th-century indoor gardeners would never have thought of.
o Closed (or nearly, like a bell jar, lantern or small-mouthed sphere): ferns, moss, lichen, violets, air plants, bromeliads, miniature orchids, ivy, impatiens, primrose, miniature begonias.
o Open-mouthed (like a vase, goblet or big bowl): Succulents, cacti. Plant them in sandy soil (or, for air plants, just place them on glass rocks or sand) and don’t water.