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Volume 7, Issue 2 | February 2020
Of Branches and Baskets: the Art of the Willow
Group show opens this month
Katherine Lewis making a willow basketSeveral local artists and artisans are bringing their willow-related work together at the Miller Library this month. Katherine Lewis, pictured here, has traveled to Europe several times to study with master basketmakers and learn more about willow basketmaking traditions.

Katherine has been invited to exhibit her work across the US. In 2011, she was honored to have several of her baskets acquired by the Renwick Gallery at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Her work was included in the recently concluded traveling exhibit “Rooted, Revived, Reinvented: Basketry in America.” She recently worked with Slovakian basketmaker Peter Juriga in the translation of his book Basketry: the Art of Willowcraft. Katherine’s baskets are also in use in hundreds of homes across the country.

You can see more of Katherine’s work at  www.dunbargardens.com, and attend a reception hosted by the artists at the library on Thursday, February 6, from 5 to 7 pm.
Fern Fever: The Story of Pteridomania
reviewed by Brian Thompson
book coverWhile preparing for a recent class on ferns for the Northwest Horticultural Society, I discovered a delightful book that has been in our collection for several years. Fern Fever: The Story of Pteridomania (2012) by Sarah Whittingham, is an extremely detailed, well-researched and well-documented history of fern collecting and growing. It especially focuses on the widespread and fervent interest these plants generated in Britain during the last half of the 19th century. This book is also a lot of fun!

Prior to the 1830s, ferns were minor players in the herbals and floras of Britain. The invention of the Wardian case was one reason for the change. These structures, much like a large terrarium, kept an even moist atmosphere for humidity-loving plants and provided a barrier to the polluted air of sooty London and other major cities. They quickly became a fashionable accessory for every middle class household.

Another discovery was a plenitude of ferns in the native flora, and that many species were prone to sporting fascinating varieties, ripe for collecting and propagating. Resorts sprang up in areas with rich fern floras, and collecting prize examples was a popular vacation pastime. “Visitors to ferny districts not only picked and bought ferns, but also purchased fern albums and local knick-knacks and curios featuring the plant as a motif...to demonstrate one’s refined taste, in both choice of holiday destination and souvenirs and presents.”

The only downside to this book is its scarcity – the Miller Library copy is for library use only. However, Whittingham also wrote The Victorian Fern Craze (2009), a condensed but equally engaging version of her later work, which is available to borrow.
Give books this month for the Garden Lovers' Book Sale
shoppers at the 2017 opening night eventWe are very pleased to announce our 2020 Garden Lovers' Book Sale. By selling extra copies of great gardening books we already have, the library is able to fund new book purchases and programs. Can you donate gently-used gardening books this month to help the effort? The last day for book donations is February 29.

The sale will open with a party on Friday, April 3, from 5 to 8 pm. Ticketholders will have the chance to meet members of our local chapter of the American Society of Botanical Artists and other local luminaries, have a glass of  wine, and enjoy delicious food while shopping for horticultural books and bidding in the silent auction. Tickets are limited and cost $30. To purchase tickets call 206-543-0415 or visit the Miller Library. A limited number of free tickets are available for book sale volunteers who are willing to help set up and take down the sale.

From April 3 through May 2, the Pacific Northwest Botanical Artists will have their work on display and for sale, with twenty-five percent of the proceeds benefiting the library.

The free public sale is scheduled for Saturday, April 4, from 9 am to 3 pm. Browse thousands of books on gardening, plants, ecology and related topics. The Garden Lovers' Book Sale only happens once a year- don't miss it!
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