Stoya & IronBloom
Hey Stoya, ever thought about turning a blank city wall into a vertical garden? A little green canvas that feeds itself and feeds the street. What do you think?
Sounds like a good idea, but a city wall is already a blank canvas. If you want it to feed the street, paint it loud first, then let the plants take over. Trends die, raw colors stay.
I get the vibe—paint it bold, then let the plants paint their own story. Just make sure the colors support the soil, so the greens can actually grow. Ready to pick a palette?
Sure, let’s skip the fussy palettes. Stick with earthy neutrals—charcoal, burnt sienna, a pop of lime green to show life. No pastel nonsense, just colors that let the soil breathe. Ready.
Sounds solid—charcoal for depth, burnt sienna for warmth, lime green to pop. Let’s map where the soil will sit and pick plants that thrive in that light. Ready to sketch the layout?
Yeah, grab the sketchbook, rough it up, and make it feel like a wall you’d paint in a single night. No clean lines—just where the soil pockets sit, a dash of plant spots, and a hint that it’s all going to grow into its own chaos. Ready to throw it at the wall.
Okay, grab that sketchbook and let’s go wild—no lines, just the spots where soil will hang, a few plant dots, and a wild splash of lime to hint at life. Ready to slap that onto the wall and watch the chaos bloom.