Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about bonsai.
Not just the tiny trees in pots—but the practice behind them. The patience. The intentional limits. The way something can be shaped by constraint and still be very much alive.
I’ve been working smaller lately. Smaller paper. Fewer materials. Watercolor instead of acrylics. It started as an exercise in “less is more,” but somewhere along the way it became about something else entirely—what it means to keep creating when space, time, and energy are limited.
I realized I’m drawn not only to bonsai, but to other small, contained things that people often underestimate. Beta fish. Plants that live on shelves. Things that look easy to keep alive, until you actually care about them thriving.
That realization cracked something open for me.
For a while, I wasn’t thriving. I was existing. And my creativity felt like it was quietly drying out at the edges. What I’m learning now is that growth doesn’t require a big studio or a massive canvas. Sometimes it just requires attention. Care. Presence.
I wrote more about this on my blog—about working small, choosing watercolor, and learning how to grow again without waiting for “better” circumstances.
You can read the full post here:
👉 https://sabrinaehlertart.com/2026/01/29/on-bonsai/
If you’re also making things in the margins right now, this one’s for you.