Topic: Flower Facts
Surefire way to a girl's heart
If you really want to earn the brownie points and reap the benefit of all the comments and accolades given to your lady, send her flowers at work. Very few women get flowers at work and the ones that don’t get them will make a huge fuss over them. Don’t wait for a special occasion, sending flowers randomly means so much more. Think of how it will make her feel when they ask, “Is it your birthday or anniversary or something?” and she replies,” No - he just loves me.”
Women remember this kind of gesture for a very long time, and you're sure to be in the good books for quite some time after sending flowers to her work. If you want to impress her with your romantic nature, then you can't go wrong sending some beautiful flowers. Contact your local Stokes Croft Florist and get the ball rolling guys!
The Florist’s Year
The florist’s year is busy but productive. The hours are often long and arduous, but the pleasures are many. A glittering arrangement, complete with champagne, balloons and novelty hats, ushers in the New Year. Special events around the year give many reasons to celebrate with romantic red roses for Valentine’s Day, pretty posies and handtied bunches for Mother’s Day, and then the joyful abundance of Easter flowers after Lenten austerities.
Christmas, with its traditional holly, mistletoe, pine, spruce, ivy, candles and glitter, plus a whole host of other possibilities for the more adventurous, is the peak of the year for any florist Wandsworth. In between these events is a constant stream of weddings, large and small, christenings, birthdays and special anniversaries toasted with champagne.
The hours may be long and the work strenuous, but the look of pleasure on the face of a bride or a new mum, makes all the effort worthwhile.
Making buttonholes
If you have a large number of buttonholes to make, set up a mini production line rather than making each one individually. The method is the same for each, so you can save a lot of time this way ensuring flowers delivered Alawa on time.
Start by collecting together all the items required — carnations, Asparagus setaceus, wires, tape and pins. For each buttonhole, trim a carnation, leaving just a short length of stem; insert a 0.71mm (22 gauge) stub wire up the stem of the carnation, and make a closed hook, then pull the wire down until it is completely hidden in the base of the carnation flower.
Select three fronds of fern from the main shoot and mount them, using 0.32mm (30 gauge) silver stub wire. If the fern has stems of a reasonable length, it is not always necessary to mount them, and this can save much time.
After wiring, tape all the materials. Once the cut materials have all been prepared, they can then quickly be assembled into the buttonhole.
For assembly, add the fronds to the carnation, piece by piece. The largest frond is placed at the back, with a smaller frond at each side. The mounted fronds are flexible, and can be bevelled outwards at a becoming angle. Finally, add a pin.
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 Tradeston 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.
My Favourite Flowers - Alnus
Hardy deciduous trees, water-loving and usually found growing near streams or rivers, alders are beautiful all the year round. As soon as they lose their leaves, catkins start developing, and with some of the previous year’s cones still on the branches, they remain attractive until May or June. A. incana ‘Aurea’ is one of the most attractive, with pink-tinged catkins in January.
Cultivation
Plant in any good soil, but not shallow chalky soils; excellent in cold wet places, the alder is exceptionally hardy. Plant October to March. No pruning is usually required.
Conditioning
Hammer the ends of the stems well, and put in warm water for several hours. Ordering a flower delivery Wythenshawe may be easier, but it's a lot cheaper to do it yourself.
Arranging
Branches of fresh young catkins, with small clusters of black cones, provide one of the best outline shapes and can be used for weeks, as the catkins continue to develop in water. It makes an excellent background for a vase of spring flowers in moss, or for daffodils, and is a mainstay in many oriental-type arrangements. I often keep the best branches to use in dried groups in the winter.
Drying in a Microwave Oven
The newest way to dry flowers is in the microwave oven. Some flowers can be dried by simply placing them between several layers of microwaveable paper towels and heating for three to five minutes. If your microwave has a setting of 2 to 10, use 4. If it has a range of defrost to high, use the defrost setting. Allow the microwaved flowers to stand for 10 minutes, and then check for dryness. Most flowers, however, will need to be covered by silica gel before being placed in the microwave. The heat of the microwave speeds the absorption of moisture by the silica gel. Almost any flower that can be air-dried can be successfully dried in a microwave oven. It is also the best way to dry extra stems. Real stems give your arrangements a more natural look than stems made from Sierra Vista florists wire wrapped in tape.
Keep your blooms cool
Never place your flowers from a San Dimas Florist in bright or overheated areas in your home. This breeds bacteria and causes an excess water loss. Use a vase that is in proportion to the size and amount of flowers that you have ordered. This could create even more water loss that you are not aware of.
Preparing an Open Posy
With the materials and container ready and prepared, start by using a sharp knife to cut foliage stems to points, then insert the foliage securely into the foam to form a circular outline around the rim of the container.
Add pieces of foliage to the top of the foam to create a domed profile. Next, add a curving line of focal flowers, the main flower being the tallest, and positioned at the centre. Fill in the outline shape with the bud materials. Insert open flowers and pieces of foliage at varying levels to fill in the centre of the design and to strengthen the elevated profile.
Recess some flowers and foliage to hide the foam and give visual depth. Look at the posy from all angles to check that it is complete and that no foam has been left visible. Ask your assistant florist Aspermont to spray lightly and store in the chiller.
Europe leads the way
In the UK, we each spend, on average, £28 on cut flowers a year. This is far below the European average, but it still means that billions of flowers are grown, cut, wrapped and transported - 85% from abroad - each year for UK consumers, with the traditional peak periods of Valentine's Day and Mother's Day leading to 20-fold spikes in demand. Come on everyone, dig deep and place some orders with your friendly florist and let's match our European cousins for the number of flowers delivered Roxbury each year!