5 Tips for Keeping Houseplants Alive This Winter
Over the last three years at Design*Sponge, I?ve spoken to countless creative-minded people. During my conversations with these innovators, one of the most interesting things I’ve learned is how they fell into their niche, special talent or skill. For many, the burning desire to follow a certain passion has been flickering in them since before […]
Over the last three years at Design*Sponge, I?ve spoken to countless creative-minded people. During my conversations with these innovators, one of the most interesting things I’ve learned is how they fell into their niche, special talent or skill. For many, the burning desire to follow a certain passion has been flickering in them since before they could remember. For others, though, some momentous event or experience propelled them towards a specific field. Hilton Carter, for example, experienced the latter when he left chilly Baltimore, MD for sunny Los Angeles and New Orleans. There he was: new cities, new homes and totally new climates to master. Unbeknownst to him, the warmer weather would end up influencing his house more than he could have ever imagined. For the first time, he was able to use greenery to decorate without the fear of a brutal Northeastern winter coming through and undoing his home?s lush look. So he started with a fiddle fig, and the rest is sort of history.
For a decade Hilton collected a thriving collection of green buddies. Then an opportunity to relocate back to Baltimore, MD came call...
Over the last three years at Design*Sponge, I?ve spoken to countless creative-minded people. During my conversations with these innovators, one of the most interesting things I’ve learned is how they fell into their niche, special talent or skill. For many, the burning desire to follow a certain passion has been flickering in them since before they could remember. For others, though, some momentous event or experience propelled them towards a specific field. Hilton Carter, for example, experienced the latter when he left chilly Baltimore, MD for sunny Los Angeles and New Orleans. There he was: new cities, new homes and totally new climates to master. Unbeknownst to him, the warmer weather would end up influencing his house more than he could have ever imagined. For the first time, he was able to use greenery to decorate without the fear of a brutal Northeastern winter coming through and undoing his home?s lush look. So he started with a fiddle fig, and the rest is sort of history.
For a decade Hilton collected a thriving collection of green buddies. Then an opportunity to relocate back to Baltimore, MD came call...
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