Quick Takes With: Alex Crowder
Instagram account that inspires you:
Describe in three words your garden aesthetic.
Overgrown bug hotel.
Plant that makes you swoon:
Queen Anne’s lace en masse at sunset, or just after.
Plant that makes you want to run the other way:
Monocropped roses for the floral industry. They’re personality-less, straight-stemmed, thornless, with obtrusive blooms and no scent. Their growing is often outsourced to farms in the global south with poor labor practices and little to no regulation on chemical use. This practice is extractive rather than collaborative and is a far cry from the twisted, barbed, and gorgeously-scented beauty of a wild or garden rose.

Favorite go-to plant:
Mountain laurel! I’m equally enamored with it as a tree in the woods or as a cut branch for arrangements. There’s nothing quite like its twisted branches that rise and and fall with an almost sensual rhythm. Its sticky geometric cup-shaped blooms make a real impression.
Hardest gardening lesson you’ve learned:
I’m not in control.

Gardening or design trend that needs to go:
Control! Overly restrained floral or garden designs look strangled and synthetic.
Every garden needs a…
Place for you to sit; to sit for as long as you can and observe the millions of tiny miracles that occur within the natural world. It’s a good balm for uncertain times. Resilience is a wonder to witness.
Favorite hardscaping material:
Stone. I don’t think there is anything more romantic than an ancient dry stack stone wall.
Tool you can’t live without:
My books. The collection we’ve cultivated in the studio library is a favorite tool, for both me and my team. I derive so much pleasure from reading and researching—it greatly informs my work.


Favorite way to bring the outdoors in.
Floristry full stop, to any and every degree. From a single stem in a bud vase on your side table to bowls of lichen around the house, any wink of nature inside reminds us to go back out where we belong. You don’t have to be a florist, you just have to be curious.
Favorite nursery, plant shop, or seed company:
Currently, Altadena Seed Library.
On your wishlist:
A natural swimming pool. [See Hardscaping 101: Natural Swimming Pools.]
Not-to-be-missed public garden/park/botanical garden:
Acadia National Park in Maine. There’s nothing like it. The ferns, the lichen, the stone. It’s prehistoric.
The REAL reason you garden:
Learning and long-term thinking. How will this change with time? It’s so different from floristry, in all the ways I need.

Anything else you’d like us to know? Future projects?
Yes! I have been curating a collection of garden and floristry tools for Slow Roads and the first collection comes out on Earth Day. It was an exciting project to work on as a fan of theirs and because it’s a great platform to showcase a more expansive take on “tools.” We included things like favorite out-of-print-books from our collection, a vintage magnifying glass from Hermes, a battery jar as a vase, and macroscopic framed prints from Karl Blossfeldt, to name a few.
Thanks so much, Alex! (You can follow her on Instagram @fieldstudiesflora.)
For our full archive of Quick Takes, head here.
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