
Some people simply know when a space feels right. They notice light before furniture and silence as much as sound. Those with an eye for beauty and a leaning toward philosophy have long understood something that International Mother Earth Day quietly affirms: that the spaces we inhabit are not separate from the natural world but extensions of it.
Observed every April 22, International Mother Earth Day is a global reminder of our responsibility to care for the planet. But beyond its environmental urgency, it also offers a more intimate invitation to reconsider how we live with nature, not just around it. It is less about grand gestures and more about a shift in awareness. A return, in many ways, to what feels essential.
For the aesthetically attuned, this return often begins at home.
A source of wonder
A well-considered space is never just about aesthetics. It is also about atmosphere. The way a room holds you. The way it welcomes, softens, and restores. In this sense, design becomes a quiet form of hospitality—not only extended to guests but to oneself. And within this layer of hospitality, nature plays a defining role.
Plants, in particular, have taken on a new kind of significance. No longer mere decorative accents, they are living elements that bring depth, movement, and presence into a space. They shift the energy of a room, from static to dynamic, from styled to alive.
This is where the philosophy behind Wonderplants resonates more personally.
Founded by Giselle Yujuico and Joanne Tengco, Wonderplants began as a passion project during the pandemic—an intimate response to a time when homes became our entire world. As Yujuico shares, the brand represents beauty and the quiet spark of magic that greenery brings into spaces. What started as a personal pursuit soon evolved into something more thoughtful: a way to help others experience that same sense of wonder.
For Tengco, it began with a shared rhythm. “Giselle and I both loved fixing our homes and incorporating indoor plants and greens,” she reflects. “What drew us in was the beauty we saw in the plants we chose and in curating them within our own spaces, and eventually, in other people’s sanctuaries.”
Even the name itself carries meaning. Yujuico recalls coming across a book titled “Wonderplants,” a phrase that lingered. For them, it captured something essential: that plants are, quite simply, a source of wonder.

Complementing a space
This sense of wonder is what elevates their work beyond décor.
Each plant is not merely placed, but considered—sculpted to complement a space, to enhance its rhythm, to contribute to its narrative. There is intention in every form, every curve, every composition. For those who see design as a language, this matters.
A sculpted plant by a window, catching the afternoon light. A curated arrangement anchoring a quiet corner. These are not just visual choices; they are gestures of care. They signal that a space has been thought through; that it holds a certain attentiveness. In the language of hospitality, it feels like: You can relax here.
This is perhaps one of the most overlooked connections between International Mother Earth Day and the way we design our environments. Caring for the Earth does not exist only in distant landscapes or policy discussions—it can be expressed in the way we invite nature into our daily lives.
More than a place to stay—it’s a place to be
To bring a plant into a space is to welcome something living. Plants benefit the mind, body, spirit, and even the air we breathe. Quiet companions that bring life into a room. They ask for attention, patience, and a certain rhythm of care. In return, they offer more than beauty; they offer presence.
For those attuned to beauty and meaning, this presence becomes a source of inspiration. Nature has always informed art, design, and philosophy—not just in form but also in process. The slow unfurling of leaves, a quiet sign of renewal and transformation you can’t help but photograph; the quiet persistence of growth that sparks hope; the balance between structure and fluidity—how something can be both well-formed and free, grounded yet evolving—are lessons as much as they are visual aesthetics.
In a workspace, this influence is especially powerful. Amid schedules and screens, a living element introduces a pause. It softens the edges of productivity, reminding us that inspiration is not only about output, but about observation and connection.
And in the home, the effect is even more personal.
A room with plants feels inhabited in a different way. There is a sense of life that extends beyond the people within it. It becomes a place not just to stay, but to be. This is where the idea of hospitality deepens—not as performance, but as atmosphere. A space that feels calm, intentional, and quietly alive is, in itself, a form of welcome.

The thoughtful gestures that define how we live
International Mother Earth Day, then, is not only about looking outward. It is also about looking inward—at the spaces we shape, the lives we lead within them, and the quiet, positive effect they have on our well-being and inner life.
Wonderplants offers a way to make this connection tangible. Through curated and sculpted greenery, it allows individuals to bring nature into their environments with intention and artistry. It transforms plants from background elements into central expressions of living design.
For those adapted to beauty and meaning, this is more than a design choice. It is a philosophy.
To live with nature is to acknowledge that beauty is not static, that it grows, evolves, and requires care. It is to understand that the most compelling spaces are not just styled but nurtured. And that true luxury, perhaps, lies in this quiet relationship—with the Earth, and with the life we invite into our everyday surroundings.
On Mother Earth Day, this relationship comes into focus. Not in sweeping declarations but in subtle shifts. A plant placed with intention. A space that breathes. A home that feels not only seen, but alive.
In the end, it is these layered, thoughtful gestures that define how we live and how we honor the world that sustains us.
To learn more, visit Wonderplants on Instagram @wonderplants.ph

A guide to wonderplants
Honeysuckle: An outdoor flowering plant that blooms all year round. According to Yujuico, flowering plants are best kept outdoors. They don’t thrive long indoors.
Bougainvillea (Bougie): Seasonal outdoor bloomer in vibrant colors
Selloum: The plant that keeps on giving. Easy to care for and often used for lush, natural styling.
Palmera: A tropical essential that also helps purify the air.
Pencil cactus: A sculptural cactus that thrives both indoors and outdoors. It is also known as the “ugly-beautiful” plant.
Gigantea: Low-maintenance and versatile. Works well both indoors and outdoors.
Yucca: Easy to care for and naturally sculptural. Adds structure and form to any space. Perfect for first-time plant carers.
Dracaena: The most sturdy plant. Ideal for restaurants, offices, and high-traffic spaces.

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