FONDOS DE PANTALLA BONSAIS Y K Description
Do you like Bonsai and Kokedamas? Do you need inspiration to decorate your home with these elements? You're in luck because here you will be able to find beautiful photos with which to get inspiration and you will also be able to share with your friends, family and social networks.
Bonsai, is a word of Japanese origin that literally means bon = "tray" + sai = "cultivate" (although etymologically it comes from the Chinese term penzai, which means pen = "bowl" + zāi = "plant") and consists of the art of growing trees and plants, usually shrubs, by controlling their size so that they remain much smaller than natural, using techniques, such as transplanting, pruning, wiring, pinching, etc., and modeling their shape to create a style that reminds us of a scene from nature. It is inseparable from the pot, since bonsai is understood as the set that makes up the tree and the pot.
The art of bonsai originated in China about two thousand years ago, where it is known as Penjing, as a cult object for Taoist monks. For them it was a symbol of eternity, the tree represented a bridge between the divine and the human, heaven and earth.
For centuries the possession and care of bonsai was linked to the nobles and people of high society. According to tradition, those who could keep a potted tree were assured of eternity. This is how the monks arranged small trees in pots along the stairways of the temples and were even a source of worship.
Kokedamas are natural plants made by hand following a traditional Japanese technique, which consists of housing the plant in an organic moss pot in the shape of a ball, hence its name Koke (moss) Dama (ball). This unique discipline derives from the popular Bonsai technique, with which it shares many similarities, serving as a guide to create a new concept that allows us to work with any variety of plant, providing the ideal conditions for its perfect development.
Some of the benefits that moss brings to plants are:
Contains the substrate replacing conventional pots.
It retains moisture in the substrate, reducing the need for irrigation.
It provides the plant with an original and functional design at the same time.
Using moss as a pot allows us to create kokedamas with any plant, both for outdoors and indoors.
The application is constantly updated so that you can enjoy new images. Off-line content, that is, you can have the content without internet and without coverage.
The application is free and uses public domain images. We try to ensure that none of the images are copyrighted. We intend to be legal and comply with the regulations, if you see any image that you dislike or think that it should not be here, we ask you to notify us and we will remove it as soon as possible.
Help us to continue creating a free App for you. If you want some type of application that we do not have, you can request it and we will try to create it for you.
Thank you for your feedback.
Many thanks
Bonsai, is a word of Japanese origin that literally means bon = "tray" + sai = "cultivate" (although etymologically it comes from the Chinese term penzai, which means pen = "bowl" + zāi = "plant") and consists of the art of growing trees and plants, usually shrubs, by controlling their size so that they remain much smaller than natural, using techniques, such as transplanting, pruning, wiring, pinching, etc., and modeling their shape to create a style that reminds us of a scene from nature. It is inseparable from the pot, since bonsai is understood as the set that makes up the tree and the pot.
The art of bonsai originated in China about two thousand years ago, where it is known as Penjing, as a cult object for Taoist monks. For them it was a symbol of eternity, the tree represented a bridge between the divine and the human, heaven and earth.
For centuries the possession and care of bonsai was linked to the nobles and people of high society. According to tradition, those who could keep a potted tree were assured of eternity. This is how the monks arranged small trees in pots along the stairways of the temples and were even a source of worship.
Kokedamas are natural plants made by hand following a traditional Japanese technique, which consists of housing the plant in an organic moss pot in the shape of a ball, hence its name Koke (moss) Dama (ball). This unique discipline derives from the popular Bonsai technique, with which it shares many similarities, serving as a guide to create a new concept that allows us to work with any variety of plant, providing the ideal conditions for its perfect development.
Some of the benefits that moss brings to plants are:
Contains the substrate replacing conventional pots.
It retains moisture in the substrate, reducing the need for irrigation.
It provides the plant with an original and functional design at the same time.
Using moss as a pot allows us to create kokedamas with any plant, both for outdoors and indoors.
The application is constantly updated so that you can enjoy new images. Off-line content, that is, you can have the content without internet and without coverage.
The application is free and uses public domain images. We try to ensure that none of the images are copyrighted. We intend to be legal and comply with the regulations, if you see any image that you dislike or think that it should not be here, we ask you to notify us and we will remove it as soon as possible.
Help us to continue creating a free App for you. If you want some type of application that we do not have, you can request it and we will try to create it for you.
Thank you for your feedback.
Many thanks
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