twig terrariums
neighborhood: gowanus | space type: makers, commercial | active since: 2009 | links: website, facebook, twitter, flickr, pinterest
Yet another amazing maker shop in Gowanus, Twig Terrariums—the brainchild of Katy Maslow and Michelle Inciarrano—sells tiny gorgeous worlds. Their terrariums are housed in mostly found glass—like vintage gumball machines, cake stands, light bulbs, pitchers, and pendants—and they’re filled with lush mosses and other plants, complete with quirky little scenes. These include sweet things like wedding couples, hiking groups, zoos, and people reading or golfing or swimming, as well as more adult fare like naked sunbathers, fornicating couples, graveyards, zombies, graffiti artists, and axe murderers.
Katy and Michelle are a couple of seriously busy crafters: in addition to running their shop and offering lots of terrarium-making workshops, you can catch them at tons of fairs, like Bust Craftacular, Renegade Craft Fair, and Brooklyn Flea. Their amazing work has been featured all over the place, including NY1, New York Times, New York Magazine, Urban Outfitters, WNYC, Design*Sponge, and more. And they’ve even have a book: Tiny World Terrariums.
brooklyn spaces: Give me a brief definition
                                        of a terrarium.
                                        Katy: It’s really just plants enclosed in
                                        glass.
                                        Michelle: Terrariums were started back in
                                        the 1800s by Nathaniel Bagshaw
                                            Ward. He wanted a fern garden in his yard but he couldn’t make it grow
                                        because there was a lot of pollution where he lived in London, but he noticed
                                        that inside this little case where he was experimenting with moths, a fern spore
                                        had somehow taken hold and grown. So he started coming up with different types
                                        of cases and seeing how different plants did. And he experimented and got it
                                        right, and it actually changed the course of history. It’s the reason we have
                                        tea, coffee; it was indirectly responsible for penicillin and things like that,
                                        because they were able to take plants much farther than they had before.
                                        brooklyn spaces: Wow! Did you know all that
                                        before you started making terrariums?
                                        Katy: No way.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: So how did this all come
                                        into being?
                                        Michelle: Katy and I were childhood
                                        hooligan friends, we used to hang out all the time and be crafty. We lost touch
                                        for several years, but then we met again about five years ago and went right
                                        back to making things together. And one day I pulled a cruet jar out of my
                                        kitchen cabinet and said, “I want to make a terrarium out of this.” Before we
                                        knew what happened, we had terrariums all over our apartments.
                                        Katy: We got addicted so quickly! We had to
                                        choose between giving them to everyone we knew or trying our hand at selling
                                        them. When we went to the Brooklyn Flea for the first time we had an amazing
                                        response, and we were picked up by the New York Times. The first day!
                                        The second time we went we got picked up by Country Living. Third time
                                        it was something else, and then something else, Rachel Ray and Real
                                            Simple and all these awesome things. It was definitely a surprise.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Did you think five years
                                        ago that this was going to be your lives?
                                        Katy: Not at all. We were just presented
                                        with an amazing, unexpected, very charming response, and this became our
                                        livelihood. We’re hoping that it’s not a passing phase. I mean, terrariums have
                                        been interesting for 200 years, and most likely they’ll be interesting for 200
                                        more. And we’re always challenging ourselves, looking for ways to make it
                                        bigger, better, cooler, more intricate, more elaborate.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Tell me about some of your
                                        favorite terrariums.
                                        Katy: My personal favorites are the graphic
                                        horror: axe-murderer scenes, post-apocalyptic scenes, wheelbarrows full of body
                                        parts, mass graves, zombies. One of the ones I have at home has a guillotine on
                                        a hill and heads rolling down. There’s an irony to it, this kind of fun,
                                        expansive space that can be filled with quirky little characters and
                                        inhabitants. One of our popular ones is a big beautiful terrarium with a little
                                        park, and then off in the corner there’s a couple doing it in the bushes. Of
                                        course, we also do a lot of unicorns and fairies. We really just go with our
                                        weird tastes and bizarrely varied interests and whims.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Tell me about some of the
                                        specific moss. Which are the funnest to work with or look the best?
                                        Katy: Well, there are like twelve, fifteen
                                        thousand types of moss in the world, so there’s a lot to work with. When we were
                                        researching, we found out that NASA was actually considering terraforming the
                                            moon with moss because it’s so hardy and adaptive. But we each have our
                                        obsessions. We love the sphagnum
                                        buds that happen in their juvenile form, and they grow in bogs, like six feet of
                                        mud, right alongside streams and ponds. Sometimes when we go mossing, we really
                                        suffer for our art. Michelle lost a shoe once.
                                        Michelle: I took a wrong turn and sunk a
                                        foot and a half down in the nastiest, stinkiest bog you can imagine. And I
                                        lifted my foot up and my shoe was gone. I had to go home with a bag over my
                                        foot, and it stunk.
                                        Katy: She reeked. And I laughed and
                                        laughed!
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Do you do your mossing in
                                        and around New York?
                                        Katy: We have freelance mossers all around,
                                        and we’re always looking for more. If you guys ever want to go mossing—
                                        Maximus: Oh my god, I want to do that. Can
                                        we do that?
                                        brooklyn spaces: Yes!
                                        Michelle: Okay, just don’t go to Central
                                        Park. You can’t take from public land or parks or anything like that.
                                    
 brooklyn spaces: How does being in Gowanus
                                        affect you as artists and small-business owners?
brooklyn spaces: How does being in Gowanus
                                        affect you as artists and small-business owners?
                                        Katy: We love it here. We’re both Brooklyn
                                        natives, and I think this is one of the best neighborhoods in the borough.
                                        Michelle: Our neighbors are absolutely
                                        amazing. Ben, who runs Gowanus Your
                                            Face Off, he came in and introduced himself the second he saw our sign
                                        go up. Proteus
                                            Gowanus picked up some glass from us to house weird objects for an
                                        exhibit. There are so many cool things in Gowanus. We’ve got Film Biz
                                            Recycling, 718 Cyclery, and Littleneck right down the street.
                                        Everyone’s got such great ideas.
                                        Katy: Everyone’s been really welcoming and
                                        supportive and really into what we do. We just love it here.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Having grown up in
                                        Brooklyn, what do you think about being here these days?
                                        Katy: I love what Brooklyn’s become. When I
                                        was growing up it was still grungy, and I do kind of miss the seedy underbelly
                                        of New York, which doesn’t really seem to exist anymore. But I very rarely go
                                        into the city, I rarely leave Brooklyn. I get my rugelach in Midwood and my
                                        latte in Gowanus and I’m a happy camper.
                                        Michelle: I’ve always loved Brooklyn. Even
                                        though it’s stinky and smelly and all the trash and traffic, it’s still so
                                        charming.
                                        Katy: Last time I had out-of-town guests,
                                        we didn’t even leave Brooklyn. We went from a barge museum in Red Hook to the best
                                        pizza in Bay Ridge to Green-Wood
                                            Cemetery, and it was the coolest. There’s so much here, it’s so quirky
                                        and fun. I fall in love with it every time I think about it.
                                    
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