Flower Power
Throughout history flowers have played an important role in famous love affairs, unforgettable fashion trends, and even in international relations. Never underestimate the impact of flowers or their place in history. For example, you will enjoy finding out about how tulips became the centre of a frenzied fever of investment that swept across Europe in the mid 17th century. More recently, flower power swept the world as part of the hippy movement of the 1970s. Flower songs, floral kaftans and even VW vans took up the theme as flowers became a symbol of the peace movement during this era. Westbury on Trym florists everywhere will often convey tales of the real power of flowers, which is of course their ability to melt a girl's heart.
Flowers of the world - Lavandula (lavender)
Characteristics: This shrubby herb, a favorite in herb and perennial gardens, has decorative silver-gray foliage and fragrant lavender flowers that bloom from July through August. Lavender forms dwarf-flowering hedges and is attractive lining a walk or edging a perennial garden, and is also a common selection in Beckenham flower delivery. The fragrant flowers and foliage are the mainstay of sachets and potpourri and are equally at home in dried or fresh arrangements. Native to the Mediterranean, lavender has naturalized in the southern United States. There are some 28 different species. The most popular varieties are Lavandula angustifolia, found in every old-fashioned herb garden, with tiny clusters of blue to purple flowers; fringed lavender (L. dentata), with green, fernlike foliage and blue flowers; English lavender (L. officinalis), with needlelike silvery-gray foliage and deep purple or white flowers. Hardy in most climate zones, munstead dwarf (L. munstead 'Hidcote') grows to a height of 18 inches and has silvery foliage and lavender flowers almost the whole summer.
Love these flowers series - Erythronium
North American species of these dainty woodland flowers are sometimes known by such picturesque names as avalanche lily, alpine lily or glacier lily, but they are most commonly called fawn lilies or trout lilies because their leaves are often mottled with brown. The one European species that can usually be found in a Brookfield flower shop is known as dog's-tooth violet because its bulb is shaped something like a dog's tooth. Fawn lilies bear delicately scented, 1- to 3-inch flowers in spring, and look most natural when grown in generous clumps beside a shady path or in a shaded rock or wild-flower garden. E. citrinum grows 8 inches tall and has lemon-yellow flowers; E. dens-canis grows 6 inches tall and has rose-purple flowers; and E. grandiflorum grows 24 inches tall, bearing unmottled green foliage and bright yellow flowers. Most other species grow about a foot tall; these include E. albidum, with plain or mottled leaves and white-to-pink flowers; E. americanum, with rather sparse yellow flowers; E. californicum, with cream-white flowers; E. hendersonii, with purple flowers; E. oregonum, with creamy white flowers; E. purpurascens, with plain leaves and purple-tinged yellow flowers; and E. revolutum, with cream-colored flowers that turn purplish as they age.
Secondary and focal flowers
The secondary and the focal flowers can be inserted into any floral arrangement. The carnation sprays are added to the design so that when it is completed they will flow across the design. The focal roses move through the centre of the design in a gently curving line. The spacing between the roses is larger at the outer edges, and much smaller at the centre, which is the focal area.
To emphasize the focal area, lilies have been recessed underneath the roses. These help the visual weight and balance of the design. The crimson carnation spray strengthens the line or grouping of the lilies and adds colour contrast. The combination of the wax flower and silvery foliage; gives an airy effect to the arrangement and is sure to please any recipient of this wonderful flower delivery Summerston.
Use short flowers and foliage types to complete the design and hide any small gaps. Mist the arrangement and keep cool.
Floribunda Roses
Floribunda roses blossom almost continuously except for a short midwinter dormant period in some climates, and from spring until frost in most areas. Combining the virtues of their parents (the hardy polyantha, with its clusters of small blossoms, and the showy hybrid tea rose, with its large blossoms on long stems) they produce clusters of moderately large blooms on fairly long stems, and are relatively hardy, most varieties surviving without winter protection in mild climate areas.
Most varieties have elegant, high-centered, 2- to 4-inch blossoms, with long, pointed buds similar to those of hybrid teas. The blossoms are often heavily doubled, with up to 60 or more petals; there are also five-petaled single blossoms and semidoubles with fewer than 20 petals. Colors range from snowy white and cream to yellow, apricot, orange, coral, pink, red and lavender. Compact, well-shaped bushes usually grow 2 to 3 feet tall and wide and have foliage and thorns similar to but smaller than those of hybrid teas.
Floribundas make good hedges and can be massed in beds of their own or in front of taller roses. They provide constant color and good cut flowers Ladybarn.
Rose Shows
Growing large and perfectly formed blossoms to compete in the organized rose shows that are held every summer in most parts of the country requires advance preparation, careful cultivation and a first-rate bush of a variety suited to show purposes. Hybrid teas are most frequently used, and among them the symmetrical, high-centered, large-petaled varieties such as Mister Lincoln and Chrysler Imperial are particularly favored by exhibitors. The techniques involved in producing flowers for competition are little different from those ordinarily employed for rose cultivation, and skill develops rapidly. I can recall a florist Encino who won prizes with the very first blooms he showed, and several other beginners who would have won had they followed more closely the finicky regulations for showing roses. For information on the two national shows held each year, write the American Rose society, 4048 Roselea Place, Columbus, Ohio 43214. Local shows are often announced in the society's magazine, The American Rose. You need a show schedule because you have to plan your strategy, and the planning begins with the selection of a show to enter. Choose one that will be held conveniently nearby at a date that gives you time in which to complete preparations.
Best loved flowers - Centaurea cyanus (bachelor's button, cornflower)
Characteristics: Bachelor's button is an old-fashioned flower that has enjoyed popularity for good reason. They made fashionable boutonnieres for gentlemen years ago. They are still very popular today when people choose to send flowers Portola for an important formal occasion. Bachelor's buttons come in several heights. The low border plants 'Jubilee Gem' and 'Polka Dot Mixed' are just 12 to 15 inches in height. Dusty miller is usually grown as an annual in colder northern climates. This tender perennial survives winters in my garden and will return to produce tiny clusters of yellow flowers.
Cultural Information: Sow seed in early spring in cold winter areas, and in late summer or fall where winters are mild. Bachelor's buttons are very adaptable and grow in poor, sandy or average soil. Fertilizer is not necessary unless the soil is unusually poor. For a continuous supply of flowers, deadhead daily. Because of their weak stems, the taller varieties need staking to prevent sprawling.
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 Goldsmith-Penwell, 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.
Under the Microscope
In laboratories and in greenhouses on university campuses and on college grounds all over the world, people are at work, studying the lily, its make-up and character. They are finding new facts. They are making discoveries. The life habits of the lily, its requirements and associations are being listed and tabulated for the first time. All of this adds up to a better understanding and to the more successful use of lilies in the gardens of our country and many Midtown East flower shops. Failures there have been and failures there will be, but as strange varieties of lilies are developed and fundamental conditions for culture better understood, success can be guaranteed as surely a with any other plant.
Can't get enough aye?
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