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Monday, 13 July 2009
Be creative with your flower choices
Topic: Flower Facts

Colour in flowers
What is colour? A basic explanation is that colour is experienced when a beam of light is refracted (broken) by a surface, and the eye then transmits the effect to the brain; in other words, we can say that it is essentially a visual sensation.
The colour wheel
For practical use in floristry, it is best to refer to a wheel or triangle of 12 full strength hues (or colours), devised to illustrate the natural associations between colours. There are three so-called primary colours — red, yellow and blue. Any two of these, mixed together, produces a secondary colour; again, there are three secondaries - yellow and blue make green, yellow and red make orange, and red and blue make violet. The tertiary colours (not only in flowers Lemongrove) are produced by mixing a primary with an adjacent secondary colour; for example, blue and green make blue-green.
Achromatic or neutral colours — white, grey and black — are not technically colours (being colourless), but they are used change the value of a hue; adding white, grey or black produces, respectively, a tint tone or shade.

Best loved flowers - Chrysanthemum par­thenium (feverfew)
Characteristics: Feverfew is a member of the daisy family. The clusters of small, white, daisylike flowers with brilliant yellow centers are often confused with chamomile flowers. The green foliage is finely indented and often strong-scented. It has long been a favorite in many cottage gardens. The flowers are useful in dried bouquets as a filler flower and can be purchased from your favorite florist Marlborough.
Cultural Information: Grow feverfew in ordinary, well-drained soil and full sun. Start seed indoors in flats in late winter and plant outdoors after danger of frost. Once established, feverfew will self-sow freely and bloom throughout the summer months.
Harvesting/Drying: Cut fever­few when in full flower and re­move the foliage. Hang to air-dry.

Who's actually processing your order?

After you choose the flowers you want, it is time to send them to that special someone, right? Well, while you may be ordering from a reputable online florist, that florist may not be the person actually choosing, arranging, and delivering the flowers. Instead, when flowers are being delivered to someone some distance away, the florist passes the job of filling the order onto a local florist. Ask who will be doing the actual flower delivery Dana Point and find out if that florist has a good reputation.

Cool flowers series - Alstroemeria
Peruvian lilies, most of which are native to Chile or Brazil rather than Peru, bear massive clusters of as many as 50 orange, yellow, lilac, pink or red 1½- to 2-inch-wide lily like blossoms atop 1- to 4-foot-tall stems from early summer until midsummer.
The petals of many flowers are streaked or marked with brown or green. Most types are not fragrant, but A. caryophyllea, a red-flowered species, is sweetly scented. The plants, crowded with narrow 3- to 4-inch leaves, grow from clumps of white rhizome like roots that are brittle and must be handled carefully when you send flowers Hillingdon to another area. The most widely available types are A. aurantiaca (orange with red stripes) and its varieties, Dover Orange (orange red) and Lutea (bright yellow), all of which grow 2½ to 3 feet tall. The excellent Ligtu Hybrids bear flowers in many pastel blends and grow 2½ to 4 feet tall. A. pelegrina (lilac pink with purple spots) and A. pelegrina alba (white) grow 1 to 2 feet tall. Peruvian lilies are usually grown in flower and shrub borders, and they provide excellent cut flowers.

Cylinders or Tubes
A single rose is the classic token of love and affection, but to wrap it in shop paper would detract from its initial romantic impact. To enhance the flower, we need to add complementary packaging. Single flowers in cylinders or tubes are suitable for most occasions. They are especially popular on Valentine’s Day, when a single red rose with a piece of asparagus fern is placed in the tube and decorated with red ribbon, but they are also appropriate for Christmas, birthdays and anniversaries. Although roses are normally used in cylinders by florists Windmill Hill, there is no reason why other flowers, such as spray carnations, freesias or orchids should not be given in tubes of this type.
Acetate Cylinders
Such containers come in many shapes and sizes, and are available from most florists’ wholesalers or from specialized packaging companies.

Creating New Roses
Sooner or later almost every gardener who starts propagating his own plants is tempted to take the next step: rose breeding. For what rose lover does not carry within his heart a secret desire to cre­ate a new and better variety, one more lovely than any other ever grown? Perhaps he dreams of fame and fortune and even goes so far as to pick a name for his unknown beauty. The chance of his achieving this goal is very slim, for the most gifted of professional plant breeders rarely finds one rose out of ten thousand seedlings that is worth introducing into commerce.
However, the amateur should not be discouraged by the odds against commercial success. The techniques are simple, and even if the flowers Stourbridge he creates are never grown outside of his own garden, he is still likely to enjoy them more than the loveliest varieties hy­bridized by other men. The professionals themselves are the first to say that rose breeding is a fascinating game of chance.

Seasonal Handtied Wedding Bouquets
It is all too easy for a florist to use similar combinations of all-year-round flowers on a regular, and perhaps monotonous, basis, but you can just as easily give your bouquets the flavour of passing seasons.
Handtied designs are becoming widely accepted by the public. Surveys suggest that customers, when given the choice, come out in favour of the instant appeal of immediately accessible flowers. It has not, however, been so easy to persuade florists to opt for handtied bouquets when getting flowers delivered Llanedeyrn, which require extra skills that are not needed for a bouquet wrapped in cellophane.
Handtied bouquets have gained popularity with brides, who appreciate their Edwardian feel (note how Asparagus plumosus is making a comeback after several years during which gypsophila has been the favourite). The most recent handtied fashion is the waterfall, in which flowers cascade downwards. This can either be held over one arm or to the front, in much the same way as a shower bouquet.

Cabbage Roses
The cabbage roses are slender bushes with arching branches and drooping flowers Hunts Cross and grow from 3 to 6 feet tall. Their red, pink or white flowers are 1 to 4 inches in diameter and have hollow centers. The flower petals often number up to 100, giving several varieties their name of Centifolia; their petals overlap in the manner of the leaves on a head of cabbage, hence the flower's more common species name. Cabbage roses are also sometimes called Provence roses, after the area in southeastern France where they were once widely grown. With few exceptions, cabbage roses have an exceedingly sweet fragrance. Their thorns are large and sometimes hooked, and their coarse foliage is wrinkled and serrated. Most varieties blossom only once a year, in late spring or early summer. Cabbage roses are extremely hardy and can be grown in most mild climates without winter protection.

Arranging those cut flowers

Ideally, you would already own a vase or two. If you don't, purchase a large glass one, the wider it is at the top, the better. Then drop large hints to your nearest and dearest that you would like to practise your flower-arranging skills. Or send yourself a bouquet. Or send one to your sister or best friend or mother and hope she returns the favour.
A bouquet usually contains enough flowers to fill two vases. Arrange the larger flowers at the back and the smaller ones at the sides and the front. Don't be afraid to mix colours, flowers love to show off, and the more striking the arrangement the better. Never cram a vase too full. Better two vases with plenty of space than one overflowing. Wrap the ribbon that came with the bouquet around your vase. Check your own garden for greenery, if none came with your bouquet. Use half of the packet of flower food straight away, mix it with the vase water and save the rest for the water change. If you didn't receive any flower food with your bouquet, phone up your local The Hills florist shop and complain!

Can't get enough aye?
Ok, so you need even more facts, tips and information on flowers? Well, you're in luck, just head over to The Flower Fact Files for more great information. Say hi from us as you browse through their mountain of flower and florist tips.


Posted by floristnews at 12:04 AM EDT
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