I don't think it applies only to millennials, even restaurants i've visited recently have a bunch of plants now!
Honestly, I really like this new trend :)
This is the same list flac linked to. The study was done in '89 and was apparently researched based on what they had down at the Home Depot that week. To no one's surprise, orchids aren't that great at filtering air but everything else pretty much is.
Uhhhh... I had 30 plants in my room alone at the age of 15. Most any of the houseplant books you find were written in the '70s or '80s. What is new is the idea that OMFG millennials are the first generation to keep something potted in their goddamn foyer.
And the plant craze of the 70s gave us this treasure from the lovely Mort Garson.
For sure, there is nothing new to potted plants - but until recently the only plants I'd see in a public place would be those dusty money trees in Chinese restaurants. I'm glad the "trend" is coming back from a space design perspective. Like that plant wall you'll be having ;) Gives a little more life to those generic minimalist spaces you see on every corner. (now with generic plant choices, but still.) " nine out of 10 millennial shoppers are searching for a six-foot-tall fiddle-leaf fig tree similar to the ones they have seen on Instagram" my favourite line from that article ahahhaa
Yo! Shut the fuck up and everyone can be happy here. Older people can roll their eyes at the millennials and their precious houseplants... The Star can get it's millennial click bait... And the millennials can look at their plants and know that they have something all to themselves... Don't let reality or memories of all the places you've ever been get in the way. Just forget the lawn and garden section of every K Mart you ever got drug through or any of the nurseries, or the plants in every office and restaurant. It may be Fake News but it's got a reason for being. Don't forget Chia Pets...
Another thought. The slummiest house I ever lived in, where I was paying $117.50 to live in Cambridge Ma., twenty years ago, sharing one bathroom with eight other people had house plants. We might have thrown out sink fulls of dishes and replaced them with 'new' salvation army dishes rather than wash them moldy platters, but we had a few plants.
The one time I didn't have plants was when a heroin addict moved into the house and stole my shit. And my roommates stopped paying for heat. Actually I don't have plants now but I've got a 40sqft green wall and enough yard that I had to chip 8 bags worth last weekend. and I'm thinking of setting up a damn terrarium because that's the kind of idiot I am.
One of my college professors did some fieldwork studying meth labs in Missouri, and he would always offer to buy any informants who lived in (FEMA) trailers a large potted plant - not necessarily because that was the friendly thing to do, but because of the crazy high level of fermaldehyde the trailers contained, and the slight fix a big ass plant provided to that. Problem is, to have enough plants to fully mitigate the problem would basically turn a trailer into a swamp.
Probably around $150 the light was the expensive part. $70 for a light T5 Ho 4' lights 4 Total $15 for a pump $5 for the air stones $20 for PH down and 1 Part nutrient solution $5 for PH litmus paper $15 for the plastic tray from Ikea $10 for the sheet of 2" foam, 1" would have worked better $10 for a 50 pack of grow plugs $3 seeds The light stand I made out of left over Al extrusion from the 3D printer project I never finished. As of yesterday that's only $75 per lettuce not including energy costs (figure heat in the winter doeskin count). elizabeth Buttercrunch Lettuce. Need a verity that doesn't grow very tall and can tolerate warm weather w/o being bitter.