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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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Thursday, 2 July 2009
Feeling the florist blues
Topic: Flower Facts

How To Care for Your Flowers

  1. The sooner that you put your flowers into water, the longer they will last.
  2. The flowers should be re-cut at the stems while submerged in water. This is important for hollow-stemmed flowers so it will prevent an airlock from forming in the stem which may prevent the flowers from taking water.
  3. The stems should be cut on an angle, which will create a wider exposed area and allow the flowers to take the maximum amount of water.
  4. Flowers delivered Victoria Park will last longer if the plant food is added to the water. An example to an alternative to plant food would be sugar.

 

Propagating Plants
Different kinds of excitement (and different challenges) await the florist Stoke Newington who turns to experimental rose growing. Any florist who has space for more roses can easily grow additional plants from parts of bushes he already has on hand. Such a segment will, if properly treated, grow roots of its own, reproducing its parent by what is known as vegetative propagation.
The offspring will be an exact duplicate of the parent. In contrast to plants propagated sexually, from seed; seed-grown roses resemble their parents no more than human offspring do. One caution: Most garden varieties are protected by plant patents, which give the breeders the right to control the duplication of their plants for 17 years; unauthorized propagation of a plant still cov­ered by a patent is a violation of the law.
The easiest way to reproduce rosebushes vegetatively is by cutting part of a plant and inducing it to sprout roots. The result is an “own-root” plant, as opposed to those plants that do not grow on roots of their own but are joined to the roots of another species. Hybrid tea roses do not grow well on their own roots, but if you choose a good climber (or, in a warm climate, a tea rose), you stand a good chance of getting offspring that grow and bloom quite well.

History of Roses
Historical records indicate that wild roses were brought under cultivation in China about 5,000 years ago. By the time of the Han dynasties just before the Christian Era, rose gardens had become so popular that huge parks were devoted to them. It is said that land needed for agriculture was tied up, threatening food production and forcing the Emperor to order the destruction of some of the rose parks and to curtail rose culture in others. During this same period the Egyptians did a thriving business growing roses for the Romans, and according to some authorities shipped cut flowers to Rome via galley (how the flowers Cobar could be kept fresh for the long trip across the Mediterranean remains a mystery). The Romans were so enamored of roses that they also supported large nurseries in the south of Italy, particularly at Paestum (near the present-day city of Salerno); one order from the Emperor Nero for cut flowers for a night’s feast reportedly ran up a bill totaling, in terms of modern currency, about $100,000.

Digging up Bulbs
After your spring bulbs have finished flowering in the garden, leave them to build up energy for the next year's cycle; when the leaves have yellowed and withered, you can snip them off if you like. In the case of most spring bulbs, this is the last gardening chore of the year. However, to guarantee a good show for next year, certain bulbs should be dug up and replanted. The very large-flowered tulip bulbs produce their biggest flowers the first spring after planting, and then the bulbs multiply into more but smaller bulbs. As a result, smaller flowers Bridgeton will appear in following years. The best way to guarantee large blossoms is to dig the bulbs up, sort them into various sizes and replant immediately, setting each size in separate groups. (Keep them out of direct sun while sorting, or they may dry out.) Eventually the small bulbs become larger, but if they are not dug up and replanted in enriched soil each year, they soon exhaust them­selves and the soil around them through overcrowding. The same technique is used for hyacinths. On the other hand, daffodils, cro­cuses, fritillarias and most of the other spring bulbs will multiply and become more beautiful each year without being dug up and re­planted. Only when they become so crowded that they produce fewer or smaller blossoms do they need to be lifted out and di­vided; the excess bulbs can be used to increase the size of the present bed or to start new beds elsewhere. When you replant, set the bigger bulbs where they will be conspicuous when they flower. The smaller ones can be planted in an out-of-the-way corner in the gar­den, a sort of nursery bed. When they have grown up they can be set in a place of honor to give you pleasure for years to come.

Nosegays
Nosegays or tussie mussies are fun to create and make wonder­ful gifts if you would like to send flowers Chorlton-cum-Hardy to someone you love. They can be made with fresh or dried flowers. A certain amount of stress will cause the dry stems to break. Caution should be taken when working with all dried material for this reason. For fresh flowers, use a selection of flowers that air-dry well. Collect the flowers one by one and hold them tightly in your hand while intertwining their stems in a crisscross pattern. When you are pleased with the combinations of color and textures, wrap the stems together with a rubber band or a piece of wire high up and close to the flower heads. If fresh flowers were used, hang the bouquet upside down until dry. After it is dry, it will be strong enough to stand up on a dresser or table without the support of a container. Before placing it on a table, tie a pretty ribbon or raffia around the rubber band. Tiny nosegays can also be used to decorate a narrow mantle or as favors on a dinner table.

Color Palette
Color is one of the most essen­tial elements in designing your garden. If you grow flowers of complementary colors, your dried flower arranging will be made easy. Many of the ever­lasting flowers (gomphrena, for example) have strong colors that need careful placement in the borders. Gomphrena 'Buddy', a lively royal purple flower that can be found in a Westlake flower shop, looks terrific when grown next to shades of pink, white or even the sunny yellow of coreopsis. Vibrant colors such as yellow and orange will bring warmth and excitement to your arrangements. Strong colors are certainly important in the gar­den and in dried arrangements.
But remember that white is also indispensable; it helps to create harmony among the other colors. The white Ammobium (winged everlasting) and Anaphalis (pearly everlasting), for example, complement the strong rose and crimson colors of Aster novae-belgii. White also brightens up both the gar­den and arrangements. You'll find that pink roses are beauti­ful in combination with the blue of lavender. Experiment with color combinations to find your favorites!

A Comb Headdress
This headdress is individually designed as an accessory for the bride or for a bridesmaid or guest. It is another variation on the corsage, and is made to complement the bridal bouquet. The design might be formed with a single flower or made from several small blossoms.
Materials chosen for this by the florist Hemet, as for any type of headdress, must be durable. The head is a warm part of the body, and fresh flowers must be able to withstand this heat for several hours (a flower sealant can be used to prevent flowers transpiring). Shorter, flatter types of flower, such as carnation sprays, gerberas, roses and single chrysanthemum sprays, are generally best. Weight is another factor to be considered — bride and bridesmaids will forget they are even wearing a design that is feather light. The comb headdress also has the advantage of being suitable for either short or long hair; extra hair grips can be used for very fine hair.
The finished design can either be glued to the comb or attached with a well-taped 0.56mm (24 gauge) wire. Ensure that the wire ends are safely finished underneath the corsage, and not on the side of the comb next to the head.

Basic Steps for Arranging
1. After choosing the con­tainer, add a support (or base) to fit securely inside. A block of floral foam or a circle of chicken wire fitted tightly into the bottom of the container will work as a support. Secure the support to the side of the con­tainer with floral tape. This important step prevents the ar­rangement from becoming top heavy. If neither floral foam nor chicken wire is available, use fine sand (a centuries-old method) as a support. Simply fill the container three-quarters full with dry fine sand.
2. Create the outline of the ar­rangement using taller spiky flowers. The stems of the flowers should not be all the same length because this would give an unnatural appearance.
3. Add tiny bunches of inter­esting material such as Nigella pods and secure them with wire onto a Bevil Oaks florists pick before adding.
4. For a final touch you may add some special flowers or pods. Place uneven numbers of these throughout the arrangement.
5. Place your filler material, such as German statice or baby's breath, to fill in holes and give a finished look.
6. Because of the brittle nature of dried flowers, spray the fin­ished arrangement with a preservative.

Bud opening

Buds are stimulated to open by different things. For many plants, heat will stimulate bud opening; so keeping the plant cool is important if you wish to delay bud opening. This is very important, and cannot be overlooked. When ordering flowers from a Melbourne CBD florist, remember the following tips and your flowers will last longer than ever before so you can enjoy the warmth and beauty of nature in your home.

Special solutions can be used to help regulate bud opening, extend the life of the flower and discourage disease attacking and rotting the stems. This is particularly important on some types of flowers when they are picked early. Carnations, among other things, are often treated this way. Solutions can be used to do the following:

  • Increase the number of flowers on stems harvested prematurely.
  • In cold storage, delay immature buds from opening for a short period until market demand increases
  • To hold buds from opening until after a weekend when businesses are closed and selling isn't happening for a couple of days.

Solutions often contain sugars to compensate (partly) for inadequate food reserves available to the buds, and a sterilant such as sodium hypochlorite, to kill disease organisms in the water. The strength of chemicals used can be critical. Some flowers are damaged by concentrations which are ideal for others. (eg. Roses and chrysanthemums are susceptible to excessively high levels of sugar).

These solutions need appropriate temperatures to be absorbed by the plant. At very low temperatures they will not be absorbed, so cool stored plants may be sometimes put into a warmer situation for a period before cool storage to allow absorption.
So the next time you're ordering flowers Little Italy, bear in mind this long complicated process of getting those blooms to your recipient.

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


Posted by floristnews at 6:35 PM EDT
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Monday, 15 June 2009
Affiliate florists are human too
Topic: Flower Facts

My Favourite Flowers - Achillea
The gold-coloured flat heads and the stiff stems with attractive fern-like leaves make a splendid long-lasting show in the perennial border and provide excellent material for the flower arranger. Achillea ‘Moonshine’ is perhaps my favourite. The pale creamy-yellow heads are so much more useful for mixing with a greater number of colours, and it dries beautifully. Bressingham Nurseries have a fascinating range of new colours coming out, with a range from apricot to reds, that will be worth looking out for.
Cultivation
Plant from October to March in any good well-drained garden soil. Achilleas like full sun. Cut the stems down to ground level in the general autumn clearing up.
Conditioning and preserving
The flowers Mullaloo last well with no special treatment. Though the stalks can be hung upside down to dry, I prefer to stand them in a jug in a little warm water, making sure the heads are not touching. They dry quickly like this and keep their shape. Covering the heads with borax gives a little better colour, but you may think, as I do, that it is hardly worth the extra trouble.
Arranging
Though I use these heads freshly cut, for me achillea is invaluable when dried and used in winter as it keeps such a good colour. It is effective with yellow mixed flowers in summer and looks well in the centre of a mixed foliage arrangement. The flat heads should always be placed so that they face you as they make a marvellous focal point in any display. They last superbly — a joy in summer when so many flowers shed their petals. They can be used on short stems of 5 cm (2 in), or full length up to 1.2 m (4 ft).

Visual balance
As well as being actually balanced, the arrangement or bouquet should also be visually balanced. This is far more difficult to achieve. To be visually balanced, a design should have the following:

  • A focal point or point of origin from which all stems appear to radiate;
  • Darker colours to the centre of the design. and paler colours at the outer edges;
  • Finer materials, such as spike ferns, used at the outer edges, and larger, more solid forms in the centre;
  • Some materials recessed to give weight to the centre of the design.
Good use of colour is also important in achieving visual balance, and is an essential component of a flower delivery Tasman design. More depth of colour is used in the centre of the design, again to give it visual weight, and the paler lighter colours are taken to the outer edges of the design.

 

Harmony and disharmony
In many designs we see how harmony can be achieved. Some designs have no harmony of parts, having four different flowers and not even foliage to unite them. The design is as busy as the background and the ribbon almost, but not quite, matches, therefore jarring slightly. With a fabric as patterned as this, it can be advantageous to ask about accessories that are to be carried or worn. It may be possible to put flowers on a plainer background.
The flowers Edgbaston and foliage in the main design contrast yet harmonize, both within the design itself and in relation to the outfit and accessories. The colour of the corsage is sufficiently strong to stand out against the strong pattern, and is a little more subtle than the bright yellow rose.

Garlands
Flowering vines and garlands offer more creative opportunities. Available in 3’-9’ lengths, they include coordinating varieties of flowers Crumpsall, leaves, twigs, pine or fir sprigs. Because the floral materials are spaced evenly along the length of the garland, they can be added to most bases, creating a wonderful background for additional materials. To add materials to a garland, dip the stems into glue and insert them among the garland sprigs, making sure they attach to the main stem.
Pine or fir garlands are usually found in 9’ lengths and are extremely versatile holiday decorations. Materials can be added to the plain garland, creating a full and rich look. A garland can also be cut into shorter lengths and wired to other bases such as baskets or wreaths. Spread the individual sprigs apart and cut through the heavy binding wires; twist the cut wire ends together to secure the end sprigs. If matching pine stems are needed, but none are available, cut sprig sections from a pine garland and wire each to a long wood pick.

Found a good florist? - keep them!
Flowers are a great gift for any occasion. Nobody wants to pay more for a flower product that has been over-valued. If you find a good flower shop online or even a flower delivery Vista del Oro professional, make sure you continue to use them. Flower delivery online really can be useful in saving time and money, but if you have not found the right online florist that you can work with, and be happy with, then the internet is not delivering all it could for you. Take the time to shop around until you find a florist whose style and prices appeal to you.

Christmas Display
Christmas is a magical time, and as florists we must capture that magic in our displays. Garlands, swags and door wreaths are still top of the Christmas shopping list. Why not update garlands with tartan bows, and swags with paper ribbons? Add fruit, nuts and gourds to door wreaths. Use exciting golds, greens, silver and blues as well as the traditional red.
Shop displays are often disappointing, reflecting an unplanned presentation of goods. Time is given to more demanding areas of work, resulting in what should be an advertisement, working 24 hours a day for the business, doing exactly the opposite. Display is an art form in three dimensions, with ideas used to attract customers to enter and buy or place a flower delivery Townhead order. Window displays have to be composed like a picture and, it is advisable to confine the objects displayed within a narrower space than the window frame itself. Novelty always stops people in their tracks, so why not use an accessory, such as a fireplace to attract attention?
The majority of goods need to be at eye level or below, as it is easier to look down than up. Good lighting is also important but it has to be discreet as the public should see the well-lit display not the lights.

Picking the right flower for the occasion

Lilies, roses and orchids are great romantic gift ideas, but there are many others out there that can also add that special spark. A daisy is a simple statement for love. They come in white or yellow and have a yellow center. A gardenia is a white flower with dark green leaves. Lilacs are great flowers to send someone. They have stalks with many white or lavender flowers.

No matter which flower delivery Knotty Ash you ultimately decide to send, you’re bound to leave a lasting impression and get into those good books. Flowers are a common symbol for love and can express the deepest emotions of your relationship. Hopefully, by sending a special flower bouquet, your love will stand the test of time!

For the new baby
The arrival of a new baby is a special occasion that needs a carefully thought out design.
The choice of flowers and foliage is important, with colour being the main design principle. The traditional pastel colours are most appropriate when having flowers delivered Creigiau, with soft pinks and white being associated with girls and pale blues and white for boys.
It also makes a nice touch to incorporate a small gift in the arrangement, such as a rattle or pair of booties.

The Flowers That Bloom Year After Year
Among the most rewarding traits of perennials is the fact that they come up unprompted year after year to offer the garden masses and highlights of color in uninterrupted but ever-changing patterns from April to November. Perennials flower abundantly and multiply without being coaxed. Most of them are easy to grow. Some require spadework occasionally from a florist Fieldston, but many will tolerate considerable neglect. In fact, I have seen long-abandoned farms in New England where gaping cellar holes and tumbled walls of old houses were adorned with great clumps of day lilies, thriving and spreading.


Posted by floristnews at 12:34 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 5 May 2009
Call of the wild flowers
Topic: Flower Facts

Helpful tips for cut flower care
A little extra care can make a big difference for any size or type of flower arrangement or fresh flower bouquet. We recommend that you use the following as a guide to maximise the life of your flower delivery Dalby.

  • Make sure vases are very clean.
  • Use fresh lukewarm water with commercial cut flower food added.
  • Strip all leaves below the water level.
  • Take at least 3cm (1") off all stems, making a slanted cut with a sharp knife or very sharp scissors.
  • Avoid direct sunlight, heat, or draughts which can shorten flowers' lives.
  • Keep flowers away from fruit and remove faded flowers as they occur.
  • Top up the water regularly and add flower food in proportion.

 

Exotic flowers
Strange and unusual shapes, strong vibrant colours and interesting names characterize exotic flowers. Many of these are now imported from such diverse countries as New Guinea, the West Indies, Singapore, South Africa and Hawaii. In general, exotic flowers have a long vase life, a crucial factor when you consider the huge distances that some of them must cover in order to reach their destinations.
The use of air freight, efficient packaging and increasingly skilful and scientific post- harvest techniques means that these flowers and other plant materials are transported much faster than they used to be, and will therefore last even longer. The art of flower delivery Takapuna certainly has come on leaps and bounds in the last five to ten years.

Constructing a Structured Bouquet
Structured bouquets are constructed in a similar way to those in the traditional style, but the design is different, and the bouquet sits on top of the hand rather than being held facing forwards in the hand. Space, and the texture and groupings of flowers are important. Foliage has an integral role, and berries, cones and even stems play a part in these designs, which look attractive from all angles, with special cut flowers and foliage at the back of the design for the bride to enjoy. Guests can admire the bride’s wedding ring, as the bouquet allows the hand to be seen.
The structured bouquet is not only seen at weddings, but is also a suitable design for presentations at any time of the day or evening, on the many occasions where fresh flowers Escalon can complete a special event.

Picks
Floral picks, short stems of clustered items, are often used in floral designing. Christmas picks are the most common; they may include berries, cones, silk leaves, packages, ornaments, and pine sprigs. Short (4”-7” tall) stems of flowers or greenery are also known as picks and can be inexpensive. Flower picks generally include 1-3 blossoms with several leaves per stem. More expensive hand-wrapped latex picks often contain a large flower, leaves, a cone or pod and twigs. These are approximately 12”-14” tall and, like hand-wrapped florals, add quality to Fulham flower delivery arrangements. While picks can be effective when inserted as stems, they can also be cut into individual components. Attach each piece to a wood pick or stem wire, then insert it into the design.

Which way to turn for wedding flowers?
When it comes to ordering flowers for your wedding, where do you begin? You can go from florist to florist scheduling consultations, or you can shop online for silk wedding flower packages that will cover all of your needs. Just turn on your laptop in the comfort of your living room or at a coffee shop with WIFI connection and you'll be on your way to planning the floral wedding of your dreams!
Silk wedding flowers are not only beautiful, but they're also practical. With silk flowers there isn't any worrying about whether or not the wedding bouquets will hold up in the heat or freeze in the cold. There are more colors and hues available than with fresh flowers and the bouquets, corsages and boutonnieres are more durable than their fresh counterparts. If a silk bridal bouquet is dropped, it can easily be prepared if a bloom falls off or a stem gets bent. That's certainly not the case with fresh floral arrangements.
There isn't a better choice for the sentimental bride either. While you can preserve your fresh bridal bouquet, it's not going to look as good as your beautiful silk wedding bouquet ten or twenty years from now. You certainly can't pass your fresh bouquet on to your daughter for her wedding like you can your silk bridal bouquet.
Depending on the age of your flower girl, you may want to consider having a silk flower girl basket, no matter what. Children can be careless at times and you wouldn't want the flower arrangement that she's carrying to end up dropped and ruined.
If allergies are a problem with anyone in the wedding party, silk wedding flowers delivered Easton are the answer. There are many different silk wedding flower packages available online. Take the time to check them out before meeting with a local florist. You may be surprised at how much money you will save going with a silk wedding flower set.

Trimming your cut flowers

When cutting, cut at an angle, as that makes greater surface area for the  water to enter the stem. Cut off any leaves that will be under water, as left on   the stems, they will begin to rot and promote bacterial growth. Keep your   flowers out of direct sunlight and heat, and change the water often. These initial steps will ensure a healthy bouquet. 
 
For those seeking natural means of protecting and caring for flowers, the   only thing to avoid from the above-mentioned description of flower care will be   the plant food and anti-bacterial preservative to keep the plants healthy. There   are many natural formulas for those preferring to avoid the chemicals found in   plant food. Water is the essential element for all of life to survive. So, ensuring that your plant gets the best water for it will ensure a longer life whenever you receive flowers Wombourne.

Creating harmony with colour
Colour, although we may not always acknowledge this, plays an important part in our lives, but whereas we may spend a considerable time coordinating the colours in our living rooms and bedrooms, we tend to think that all flowers will go together.
The effect of colour can he noted by florists, as flowers are often used to help to create an atmosphere or mood. Red is an exciting and warm colour; it can also be aggressive. Blue is almost the opposite, being cool and quiet. Violet is rich and somber in some surroundings, while yellow is cheerful and warm. Orange is also warm and hospitable; green can be refreshing, and dark green is relaxing. Green, in any case, is the natural accompaniment to most flowers.
Colours are never seen in isolation in normal life; there are always surrounding colours, and they react with each other, for lighter or darker, for louder or quieter, for better or worse.
The way in which artificial light affects flower colours is important to florists. White fluorescent light makes blue look brighter, while ordinary light bulbs turn it to a rather depressing purplish grey. White, pink and orange look reasonably good in artificial light. Each time you decorate a marquee, take notes on the effect of diffused light on the flowers, as it is difficult to remember such details in the mind’s eye. Create your flower delivery Butetown with these points in mind for the best results.
When designing, use flowers with strong hues and bright colours towards the centre, and paler tints and tones at the outer edges. This will give visual stability as well as impact. A gentle gradation of colour is a subtle way of leading the eye into and through the design.
A colour wheel is a good aid to heighten your awareness of colour. If you have only thought about colour in general terms, a wheel will increase your confidence in using colour. Successful colour harmonies give assurance, and can lead to more complex and challenging ways of using colour in flower designs.

Bulbs: Bold Beauties
Bulbs have an important place in an all-season garden. Bulb-type plants include not only daffodils and other spring bloomers that brighten the end of winter but also those that appear in summer and fall, the lilies, irises, dahlias, and many more that add so much to the joy of gardening. Like perennials, bulb clumps increase in size each year, and you can divide them every few years to expand your planting or give to friends. When the first snowdrops (Galanthus) peep through the snow in late winter or early spring, we’re elated. Later, the daffodils, crocus, tulips, and hyacinths provide bright spots of early color even when the lawn appears dead. Throughout the summer, bulbous plants such as crocosmias, lilies, lily-of-the-valley, ornamental onions (Allium), oxalis, Persian buttercup (Ranunculus asiaticus), and spider lilies (Lycoris) add interesting blooms and foliage textures. We have obtained such an astounding collection by having the many different types of flowers delivered Seaforth.

Floral Corporation Mergers
In a few sections there has been a merging of sales by corporations. Notable examples are the Hill Floral Products Company of Richmond, Indiana, and the United States Floral Products Company of Elmira, New York. These large concerns dispose of the products of many small growers in the locality, designating to some extent what each florist Kemah shall produce, so as to avoid market gluts of some types of flowers and a scarcity of others. Competition and consequent cutting of prices by the growers have been obviated to the mutual advantage of all concerned and the florist business as a whole.


Posted by floristnews at 9:13 PM EDT
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Wednesday, 8 April 2009
Take a break this weekend from the florist life
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!


Posted by floristnews at 11:45 PM EDT
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