Tuesday, November 3, 2009

If you don’t measure up - send some flowers

Constructing a Hoop
The hoop is first covered with paper ribbon, which is simply wound around the hoop and held firmly at the join with florists’ tape. The flowers are wired and taped, using the appropriate methods, and bound together with fine binding wire. The wires are divided into two sections and bent outwards after being trimmed to approximately 2.5cm (un). They are then taped onto the hoop and the leaves pulled over the taping to conceal it.

Another way to make this type of design would be to make a garland and wind it around the hoop.
Choice of materials
Small dainty flowers Kensington Park are the most suitable for a hoop; large flowers are too heavy and would be difficult to balance. They would also be visually too heavy for such a dainty design.
As with any bridal design, the colours will be chosen to match the dresses of the bride and her bridesmaids, and the flowers to match the bride’s bouquet. Ribbon trails may be used to complete the design.

Mother’s Day Designs

Flowers are the favourite gift for Mother’s Day, and every year the public spend thousands of pounds on flowers to celebrate this special occasion.
Preparations for Mother’s Day include the following:

  • Keep lists of previous years’ sales to assist with the ordering.
  • Make out flower delivery Alexandra routes and check that the drivers know the areas.
  • Write out all cards well in advance.
  • Make sure that all staff, and temporary staff in particular, understand the shop procedures.
  • Set up containers and green the week before.

Over the years, the preference for certain designs has changed, from the bunches of primroses and violets of the early years of this century, through to formal rigid arrangements in the 1960s and 1970s and back to handtied informal designs for the 1990s.

Autumn Arrangements
Nostalgia seems to pervade the florist’s shop during the autumn months. Although they are available all the year round, rust and bronze chrysanthemum blooms and sprays epitomize autumn, but many seasonal flowers are associated with this time of year, including dahlias, with their rich colours and varied shapes, golden rod, and the slightly more exotic criniums, with their delicate pink trumpets.
Cereals, such as wheat and barley, are appropriate for harvest festival designs, and although traditional arrangements remain popular, modern arrangements lend themselves particularly well to the varied textures of vegetables, berries and fruits, and many new churches require the bold lines of a modern design to complement the decor. Autumn is a wonderful time to be a Bromsgrove florist.

Container tip
The container that holds your arrangement should be similar in spirit to the flowers it houses. For soft, romantic effects, almost anything can be pressed into service — a vintage perfume bottle, a fragile antique teacup, a rustic jug or a ceramic vase shaped and signed by a potter’s hand — the more eclectic, the better. These individual, one-off containers create small arrangements that have the exquisite air of a still-life. Even a humble tin spray-painted for the occasion will help communicate a bouquet’s — or single blossom’s — sweet nostalgic charm. If you are completely stuck for ideas just get your florist to add a suitable container to your next flower delivery Failsworth. The time it takes (even if only five minutes) to match up blooms and vase is time well spent, for t is spent entirely on ourselves, making these flowers the most meaningful flowers of all.

My dearest flower series - Hyacinthus
Hyacinths have a sweet, haunting fragrance that gardeners everywhere associate with spring. The most familiar species is the large-flowered hyacinth, H. orientalis, which grows 8 to 12 inches tall and bears 6- to l0-inch pompon-like clusters of single or double flowers Baldwin Vista. Notable varieties are Amsterdam (salmon pink), Bismarck (pale blue), City of Haarlem (primrose yellow), L’Innocence (pure white), King of the Blues (rich indigo blue) and Pink Pearl (deep pink). H. orientalis albulus varieties have slender 6- to 8-inch stalks of graceful, widely spaced blue, pink or white flowers. Bulb catalogues usually list three additional species as hyacinths. H. amethystinus has 4- to 10-inch stalks of tiny pale blue or white bell-shaped flowers that appear after other hyacinths have faded; H. azureus has 4- to 8-inch stalks lined with tiny dark blue flowers and looks much like the grape hyacinth (Muscari); H. romanus has 6- to 12-inch stalks and ¼-inch blue or white flowers. All three are excellent bulbs for rock gardens or for naturalizing in rough grass.

Drying on the premises
Professional growers of dried flowers have temperature-controlled warehouses with dehumidifiers to speed up the drying process. In the florist’s shop, the same flowers and foliage can be air dried. The process is very simple, but it takes longer. Because it is so simple, many florists underestimate the potential that air drying has for even the smallest business. Materials dried ‘in house’ give the arrangements created a personal touch, and are a way of selling cut materials that have not proved popular when sold fresh.
So what is the best way to air dry? An area with a good circulation of air is required, out of direct sunlight. The ceiling area of a business meets these qualifications and generally provides an ideal place for drying flowers. Lengths of twine or binding wire can be strung across the ceiling so that bunches of flowers delivered Roughmussel and foliage can be attached to it, upside down. As well as having a rustic charm, viewed from below, these attractive bunches of flowers, herbs and foliage will eventually serve a practical purpose.

Vases and containers
Today the word ‘container’ is used more widely than ‘flower vase’, maybe because we are using receptacles from around the house which started life for a very different purpose. Copper kettles and jugs make ideal flower vases, as do pewter mugs, teapots, tea urns, wooden boxes and tea caddies. Silver wine- coolers, entrée dishes, candlesticks are all ideal and so much more interesting than a traditional cut-glass flower vase.

Search round the house to see what you can find, and if you go to buy a vase try and get one in neutral colours, say in white-grey or dusky pink, so that you can use it with a wide variety of colourings. Your local Walton florists are always a good source of floral containers. Although bright colours may be lovely for a special occasion, they can be very restricting for everyday use. If you become an arranger then you will automatically become a vase collector.

My dearest flower series - Gladiolus
Gladioluses are grown primarily for cutting, and few if any other plants offer such a wide variety or mass of color for bouquets, which make excellent gifts to be sent by Rumney flower delivery. Plants range from 1 foot to over 5 feet in height, depending upon the variety and growing conditions. Although individual plants bloom only for a week to 10 days, a staggered planting schedule will assure flowers for about three months. All have sword-shaped foliage that may remain green until cut down by frost.
Of the 150 or more wild forms of the genus, plant breeders have used about a dozen South African species in developing G. hybridus, the familiar modern "glads." Because of their complex ancestry, these hybrids are classified by color and flower size. The North American Gladiolus Council recognizes 28 different basic colors and lists them in a numerical sequence beginning with white (coded 00-01) through green, cream, yellow, buff, orange, salmon, scarlet, pink, red, rose, lavender, purple and blue to smoky, tan and brown (96-97). Numbers have been reserved in the ranges where new colors are expected to be developed.

Flowers at your wedding reception

Many reception venues will include flowers in their package. If this is the case do a little digging around and make sure they will complement what you are having in your bouquets and that they will suit the style of wedding you have selected. You are by no means limited to what your local florist will provide you with and do not be afraid to say what you want. After all it is your special day and in most cases your reception venue will be more than willing to accommodate your needs. You can always call a florist to add extra flowers Ozone Park to what is provided if you feel it is not enough. You must be careful however, if you are using more than one florist ensure that what they provide is consistent.

Need more?
This information is brought to you by the Flower Baron. Another great resource for flower and florist information is Florist Info.

Posted by funkyflorist in 01:08:42
Comments

One Response

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