SKU: 80976300789
pot plant house party

pot plant house party Plant Party for Two

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Description

pot plant house party Plant Party for TwoEnjoy your own (Private) Plant Party at The Darrington Studio in East Austin. We supply all necessary elements to build your own terrarium, including glass, plants, rock, moss and personal hands on instruction. Terrarium builds are a fun hour long workshop where you can create your own design and byob with friends! NOTE: We have closed the retail location and have relocated our classes to an architect studio down the street. The Darrington Studio 912

Enjoy your own (Private) Plant Party at The Darrington Studio in East Austin. We supply all necessary elements to build your own terrarium, including glass, plants, rock, moss and personal hands-on instruction. Terrarium builds are a fun hour-long workshop where you can create your own design and byob with friends!

NOTE: We have closed the retail location and have relocated our classes to an architect studio down the street.

The Darrington Studio

912 Montopolis Dr

Austin, TX 78741

After you finish mini-scaping, we provide boxes for transport and written care instructions to take home.
Our enclosed botanical designs and succulents are naturally more sustainable by requiring less water and exceeding life after design.

(shipping address required to complete order, nothing will be shipped! Thanks!!)

Onsite Group Build Instructions 

  1. Schedule your desired build date and choose your start time from the drop-down menu. Keep in mind that workshops are about an hour for smaller classes to an hour and a half long for larger classes.
  2. Select one Couple’s Build. The class starts at $65 per builder and covers individual builder fees so each attendee can build.
  3. Need to schedule more? Find our OFFSITE BUILD here.
  4. Show up for your selected time and we build!

Additional Tips for the Class

  1. If you'd like to schedule the party, but want everyone to pay separately, first schedule and pay for your time and date, then send the following link to friends to pay separately: https://plantparty.co/products/single-ticket-terrarium-group

We ask you have everyone paid 24 hours in advance from the party date and time. 
2. BYOB is welcome, but we ask if you bring food, you eat before we start building, because...well...dirt. :)
3. Free Parking in parking lot, occasionally there will be events where the lot is full, so feel free to park on the curb on the street. 

4. There's a lot to do on our neighborhood on Springdale Rd, so make a day of it. 


 Retail:

  • Blackfeather Vintage (vintage clothing)
  • Ghost Pepper Glass (glasswares & classes)
  • Clover & Maven (woman-collective of mixed jewelry & goods)
  • The Paper Craft Pantry (paper store)
  • Son of a Sailor (simple jewelry)

 


Restaurants/Coffee:

In our Complex

  • Eastciders
  • Bambino Pizza (opening date TBA) 

At Springdale General

  • The Front Page (bar/sandwhich/salads)
  • Uroko (sashimi, sushi, sake)
  • Medici Coffee
  • Julia Myrtille Patisserie
  • Weh? Asian Fusion

At Canopy

  • Sa-Ten (cafe/coffee & Japanese snacks)
  • OMG Squee (bubble tea & mochi donuts)

on 7th

  • Kinda Tropical (light fare)
  • Casa Colombia
  • Bosses Office (cocktail bar)

Since we are a small business production we ask that you respect our time. In this one hour class, we give you all the elements, plus tips and tricks to get you from A to Z in terrarium building.  $1/minute per person will be charged if your event runs longer than that scheduled. However, we allow about 10-15 minutes of time before and after sessions, to situate and finish up.

*No Refunds. $25 Rescheduling fee per group.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
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Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
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SKU: 80976300789

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Tone Waters
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Your Next Church Read
Format: Paperback
Brilliant. Important. Timely. Pastor Lamar calls the Western church to decenter itself so that ableism and racism will dissipate. I will go back to this book time and again for my advocacy work inside and outside of the church.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2024
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Panda Incognito
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 4
Powerful and Hard-Hitting
Format: Paperback
This book explores how racism and disability justice issues intersect and intertwine, particularly within the American church. Lamar Hardwick writes from his perspective as an autistic Black pastor, and his recent battles with cancer also inform his writing. He takes an incisive look at the ways that people sideline and make judgments about "abnormal" bodies, and he explores how different racist and ableist ideas developed in early American history, primarily related to enslaved Africans. Because I share Hardwick's interest in American history, I was already familiar with most of this information, but it will be new and eye-opening for many readers. Hardwick clearly explains the historical connection between ableism and racism, showing how people justified slavery by arguing that Black people were intellectually inferior, were childlike, and should not have agency over their own lives. Hardwick explores both glaring and subtle implications of this ideology, and he makes a number of very excellent points. He is bold and doesn't mince words, and he explains complicated, abstract ideas in accessible terms. He also touches on a variety of side issues to his main thesis, such as desirability politics, body shame, and issues with grind culture. Hardwick gives examples of how early American Christians contributed to pervasive cultural problems, and he also shares contemporary stories to show how problematic ideas cause harm in real life. His personal stories add a lot to the book, and I appreciate his honesty and vulnerability. I also appreciate how Hardwick uses Scripture throughout the book, especially when he is writing about disability theology. Some similar books focus primarily on personal experiences and secular social justice theories, with only loose Scriptural connections, but Hardwick bases his arguments in specific Bible passages and the big story of Scripture. I disagree with some of his interpretations, but found his arguments significantly more persuasive than ones I've seen before. One confusing, weaker element of this book is that Hardwick begins using "ableism" as a catch-all term for any kind of hierarchy of human value. Even though different forms of discrimination can overlap in complex ways, Hardwick often uses the word "ableism" in cases where there isn't a direct reference to physical or mental abilities. Because he stretches this word's definition, readers who are new to this conversation may struggle to follow his arguments at times. My other critique is that even though Hardwick is accurate and persuasive in his coverage of historical wrongs in the American church, he sometimes makes it sound like all of these issues started with American Christianity. Even though we can trace back particular expressions of racism and ableism to influential people like Cotton Mather, the root issues are part of the human condition. Many Christians throughout time have absorbed harmful ideas from their societies and expressed these assumptions in Christian language, but they weren't inventing these forms of oppression. Also, even though people created specific racist beliefs to justify the institution of slavery, ableism has been an issue in all cultures since the beginning of time. Christianity began in a cultural context where it was normal and acceptable for parents to discard female and disabled infants to die in the elements, and early Christian advocacy is part of why that is so gut-wrenching and unthinkable to us now. Even though Hardwick's analysis is helpful, it's only part of the story. I think that he could have balanced it out better with more context, while still holding the same American historical figures accountable for their sins and failings. "How Ableism Fuels Racism" covers a variety of issues in a thought-provoking, engaging way. I appreciate the author's historical analysis, thoughtful reflections, and personal stories, and I would recommend this book to people who are invested the topic. Also, even though some aspects of this book might be confusing for people who haven't read anything like this before, the author's accessible writing style, clear explanations, and personal stories can help engage readers who are new to the topic. Overall, I was impressed with this book and am interested in reading more from this author.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2024
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Verified Purchase
Kristen
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Amazing Book Every Church Leader Should Read
Format: Paperback
Great Book and worth reading
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2024
L
LGB
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Provocative Read!
Format: Audiobook
I found this book to be profound, provocative, and very different than any other books I have read on racism and ableism. I never understood how ableism is the catalyst for racism, and how disability compounds racism. Highly recommend especially for those who are well versed in social justice.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2025
R
Richard P.
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Destined to Be One of My Favorite Books of the Year
Format: Paperback
I will openly acknowledge that Lamar Hardwick, the lead pastor of Atlanta's Tri-Cities Church and a pastor with autism, wasn't on my disability theology radar and I wasn't sure what to expect from his upcoming release "How Ableism Fuels Racism: Dismantling the Hierarchy of Bodies in the Church." I was blown away. With "How Ableism Fuels Racism," Hardwick proposes that ableism and the resulting disability discrimination are the root causes of racial bias and injustice in American culture and in the church. Weaving together a tapestry of historical records, biblical interpretation, and disability studies, Hardwick examines how ableism in America led to the creation of images, idols, and institutions that would ultimately fuel both disability and racial discrimination. After engaging in this discussion, Hardwick calls the church into action to address the deeper issues of ableism and offers practical steps to help readers dismantle ableism and racism in both attitude and practice. As an ordained minister and seminary graduate who is also a paraplegic and double amputee, I've long immersed myself in the world of disability theology and long believed that the church embraces the hierarchy of bodies about which Hardwick writes. "How Ableism Fuels Racism" served up a myriad of Aha! moments for me and times when long-held beliefs were finally communicated with clarity. Interestingly, Hardwick even clarified for me what had troubled me with another book I recently read around the issue of "deconstruction." I may have actually shouted out "Yes, that's it!" I've long believed that being accommodated by a church is the ground floor step toward full inclusion. It's far from enough, yet for an institution that fought against the ADA it's often seen as the ultimate gift for those with disabilities. Instead, Hardwick argues that the church should be passionately pursuing those with disabilities and others outside the "typical" hierarchy of bodies." I'm telling you. Brilliant stuff here. I can't stop thinking about it. Precise in its criticism yet also constructive and forward thinking, "How Ableism Fuels Racism" confronts the shameful and shame-filled underbelly of American Christianity and offers a broader and more inclusive vision of God, faith, and church life. How much did I love this book? I'm already reading it again.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2024

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