Glass House Terrarium
A little greenhouse of your own. This striking glass house terrarium features a black metal frame with a pitched roofline and hanging chain — architectural in form, wild at heart. Inside, a sculptural piece of natural driftwood anchors the landscape, with delicate maidenhair fern cascading to one side, white-veined and pink Fittonia filling the foreground, and a white quartz crystal catching the light from above. Layered gravel and dark substrate complete the scene.
Hang it from its chain or rest it on a shelf — either way, it looks like it belongs in a design magazine.
Hand-planted individually — each piece is subtly unique in its driftwood placement, planting, and character.
What's inside:
- Maidenhair fern (Adiantum)
- White-veined Fittonia (Fittonia albivenis)
- Pink Fittonia
- Natural driftwood feature piece
- White quartz crystal
-
Layered natural gravel & drainage substrate
📏 Size
25.9L x 15W x 20.8H centimetres
Care Guide — Closed Terrarium
Light: Bright, indirect light. Never in direct sun — the glass amplifies heat and will stress the plants. A well-lit shelf or north/east-facing windowsill is ideal.
Watering: Rarely needed. The closed system recycles its own moisture through condensation. Check the glass each morning — light fogging is healthy. If the glass stays completely clear for several days, add a small splash of water (20–30ml) and reseal.
Ventilation: If condensation is heavy and blocks your view for more than a day, crack the lid open for a few hours then reseal.
Temperature: 18–26°C. Keep away from heaters, air conditioning vents, and cold draughts.
Feeding: Quarter-strength liquid fertiliser once every 2–3 months in spring and summer only.
Pruning: Trim any leaves touching the glass or growing too large. Remove dead leaves promptly to prevent mould.
🚚 Delivery
Available Australia-wide except Western Australia (WA) and Tasmania (TAS) due to biosecurity restrictions.
Note:
Each terrarium is individually hand-planted, so yours will be unique in its own way — slight variations in plant placement, moss coverage, and pebble arrangement are what make it one of a kind.