A sea of green overtook the St. Jude Event Center on Sunday afternoon as plant lovers from across Dallas-Fort Worth came to celebrate The Bloomverse Expo.
The event was one of the first of its kind in Arlington, garnering hundreds of attendees, with lines wrapping around the building and over 50 vendors selling anything from plants to handmade dreamcatchers and jewelry.
Viridiana Robles, owner and founder of The Bloomverse Expo and Plants by Viridiana, said she did not expect such a large turnout.
“[The markets] have never been this big,” Robles said.
Bloomverse was the first plant convention that many attendees and vendors had participated in of this size.
Aubrey residents Julie Harris, 34, and Chloe Freret, 36, ran a booth together and had never been to an expo event before Bloomverse. Harris said they wanted to create an inclusive space.
Harris and Freret have kids on the spectrum, which drives the way they sell their items, selling kid kits which come with an affirmation card, care cards and a Pothos cutting that kids can plant themselves.
The pair got into growing plants during the COVID-19 pandemic, and since then, it’s been a long journey, Harris said.
“I mean, these people often have other jobs like we do, and they're putting their additional time away from their families to do something that they love and they feel passionate about, and that's a huge thing,” Harris said about other vendors in the community.
To many attendees, the event was about more than just plants — it was about people.
Forney resident, Alexandra Gartin has been a part of the plant community for around six or seven years. She said the community makes her feel included and serves as an icebreaker in getting to know people.
“Mostly everybody in the plant community is really nice and welcoming,” Gartin said.
Dallas resident Blanca Charles, 35, said her mother’s love for plants and the support from her family and partner drove her to start her business, Rooted by Blanca Charles.
While she has been at various pop-up shops across the Dallas-Fort Worth area before, Bloomverse was her first time doing a plant-specific expo.
Charles is not alone in her endeavor, however. Her partner, Lancaster resident Armando Molina, 35, pushed her to start her business so she could have something to call her own and has helped her at every pop-up event, he said.
“It was scary for her to start, she didn't know what to do,” Molina said. “So I kind of gave her that little push and she did it. Now she's doing pop-ups everywhere.”
When Molina first joined the plant community, he didn’t know anything about plants, but the community is what kept him with the hobby.
“Everybody's so friendly. You get people from so many different types of backgrounds and characters,” he said. “It's just so many different types of people, and it's beautiful to see.”
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