Monday, November 23, 2009

Life is a marathon not a sprint - celebrate it with flowers

A pretty flower - Zinnia

Characteristics: Zinnias, which come in many radiant colors, are the glory of the summer garden. The flowers range in size from 2 inches to 6 inches. Some have ruffled petals and others are open like daisies. They bloom in a few weeks from seed and withstand hot dry weather. Zinnias make wonderful cut flowers and also dry nicely when placed in silica gel.


Cultural Information: Zinnias like well-drained garden soil enriched with rotted compost. They are prone to mildew, so it is best to water at the base rather than overhead. You can also buy one of the new mildew-resistant varieties such as Burpee's 'Pinwheel' Series from Balaclava florists, which comes in wonderful colors. To encourage bushy plants, remember to pinch the blossoms back. The more you cut, the more zinnias will produce. My favorites are the dahlia-like double-flowered zinnias such as 'Burpee's Big Tetra Mixed' and 'Giant Flowered Mix', which dry beautifully.

Harvesting/Drying: Collect flowers to be dried at their peak of bloom, and before they have started to fade in color. Check to make sure the flowers you pick are not discolored by mildew.

My dearest flower series - Fritillaria

Leaping from the earth in spring, unmarred by frosty weather, the 2½- to 4-foot stems of the crown imperial are topped by a crest of leaves beneath which hang great clusters of 2-inch reddish orange, bronze, red or yellow flowers. Because the flowers' odor is musky and the lily like leaves die down in early summer, crown imperial is best planted in perennial or shrub borders where neither its scent nor its fading foliage will be objectionable. The only other species that is widely available from a florist Mt Eden is the spring-blooming F. meleagris. It grows about 12 inches tall with drooping bell-shaped 1½-inch flowers checkered purple and white; F. meleagris alba is pure white. Both make good borders or random plantings in rough grass.


There are many species of fritillaria native to western North America, but these usually do not succeed elsewhere. Among them are F. lanceolata, which grows 1 to 2 feet tall and has yellow-mottled dark purple 1-inch flowers; F. pluriflora, which grows 6 to 12 inches tall and has pinkish purple 1-inch flowers; F. pudica, which grows 6 to 9 inches tall and has purple-tinged yellow 1-inch flowers; and F. recurva, which grows 24 to 30 inches tall and has yellow-checkered scarlet 1-inch flowers. All bloom in spring.


Preparing a mossed frame

Most florists use plastic foam bases as foundations for funeral tributes, as preparing a moss frame — mossing the frame, backing and then edging it — is a tedious task. However, the techniques involved in using a mossed frame are part of the florist’s basic skills.

Mossing, backing and edging


Collect the materials together and start by cleaning the damp moss, removing any twigs or stones. Attach reel wire or string to the frame and, with the frame directly in front of you, place several handfuls of moss, about 5cm (2in) high, on the frame. Bind the moss on firmly, and continue, adding moss evenly and binding diagonally across the fame until it is completely covered with moss. Take the reel wire around for a second time between the previous twists of wire. Cut the wire; return it into the moss, and trim the moss to an even shape.

Now back the wreath: turn the frame over; secure the wreath wrap with hairpins on the inside; stretch the wrap over the frame and hairpin it in place at regular intervals. Continue the process until the frame is complete.

Before getting the flowers delivered Wednesbury, the wreath must be edged. Double-leg mount well-balanced fans of cupressus and, starting on the outer edge, insert the wired fans into the lower part of the frame, just on the wreath wrap. The anchored foliage should slope downwards, towards the workbench. Complete first the outer and then the inner edges, ensuring that the foliage overlaps and maintaining an even circular shape.



Caring for Roses

No matter how carefully you plant your roses, the plants cannot produce blooms unless they have an adequate supply of moisture and fertilizer to keep them actively growing, for only then do they send out flowers Northenden. This need will continue even after the plants are well established. With very few exceptions, the amount of food and water that must be given roses to stimulate a maximum amount of bloom is the same whether the bushes are old or new.


Water is usually the element in short supply, rather than fertilizer. Frequently there is still a considerable amount of plant food in the soil in midsummer, nutrients left over from spring feeding; however, unless moisture is present, the food cannot be assimilated by the plants. It is easy to see that the flush of bloom in both spring and fall coincides with the spring and the fall rains, when there is adequate moisture in the soil.

Go for something different


Flowers such as zinnia, tall phlox, peony, foxglove, sunflowers and others will be fresher than those that have been shipped long distances to a retail florist. You may find flowers that you love, but never realized were available as a cut flower. Always do your homework first, that is the golden rule here. If the flowers arrive on your wedding day and are not what was expected, then its too late to do anything about it.

Finding a reputable local florist to fulfill your flower delivery Montebello can be easier than you think. Check the local telephone directory and do some internet searches. They can give you names of florists in your area. Local farmers markets are also a great place to locate a local flower grower.

Problems in using wild flowers

Growing, as they generally do, in poor soil wild flowers often have long tap roots to enable them to survive. If these roots are severed the flowers will wilt very quickly. So if you are intending to gather wayside flowers I suggest you should keep a strong plastic bag handy in the car. As you cut, say, cow parsley or bluebells place them head-first in the bag. Everyone puts them stalks-first into bags and this is how problems start. If you keep the heads out of the air the flowers suffer much less from lack of moisture. As quickly as you can after picking them, place the stems in a bucket of really warm water. This will give them the best chance of lasting reasonably well. I find that of the many wild flowers I like to use, bluebells and cow parsley, or cow parsnip, are the favourites. They last better (unlike those from a Carnwadric florist) if not on very long stems. Bluebells, like wallflowers, should be cut on stems no longer than four or five inches (12—15 cm), then mass them in a box or basket. In this way they last very well and the scent is out of this world; they appear to like being packed closely together for they always seem to last better this way.



Rose Cultural Information

Roses prefer full sun, good drainage, and soil rich in organic matter. They also prefer good air circulation, which helps prevent mildew and disease on the foliage. Roses need large amounts of water (3 inches weekly) but must have fast-draining soil. Feed roses with a slow-release fertilizer in early spring and after the first flush of bloom. A top dressing of well-rotted manure in late autumn will add nutrients to the soil. Organic matter is always beneficial to roses, but remember to check the pH, which should be at or close to 7. Add lime after application of manure to ensure a proper pH. Old roses are very disease resistant so there is no need to spray these roses with chemicals. However, it is important to keep the garden clean and free of faded petals and fallen leaves. Garden litter is a tempting place for insects and pests to breed. If insects are a problem, try sprinkling onion water (cool water in which onion has been boiled) or onion mulch (chopped onion greens) around the base of the plants. Shrub roses need little pruning and look best left to their natural shape. Prune once a year before the buds appear, in early spring or later winter. Simply cut out dead or old canes and cut existing stems back by one-third. Roses can be propagated from cuttings, but it is wiser to purchase your plants from a florist Bootle or garden center.


Dried Flowers

Dried flower arrangements have become increasingly popular as the price of fresh flowers in winter continues to go up and the ever-rising cost of oil makes heated greenhouses more and more expensive to run. For myself, dried or any kind of preserved flowers can never replace the value or delight one gets from fresh flowers, especially in winter. I think I still prefer to preserve background material in glycerine and use this with fresh flowers or foliage until one can pick a bunch of spring flowers or get them from a local Riverside florist. But the occasional pot plant can sometimes take their place and last Christmas was made easy for me because of a superb white azalea which has been sheer delight.

There are many aspects of dried flowers and foliage and different ways of using them. You can make colourful posies which will last all winter, remaining pretty and cheerful, or for background material you can use the more sombre and neutral colourings which are ideal when mixed with a few salmon or apricot chrysanthemums, or some variegated leaves. In this way you can make a large arrangement when flowers are scarce and expensive. Many flowers of attractive colouring can be grown from seed for drying and more lovely grasses become available every year.




My Favourite Flowers - Aconitum lycoctonum ( Monkshood )

The more common varieties of monkshood have blue-mauve flower spikes resembling those of a delphinium, but the one I would like to recommend here is A. lycoctonum, very delicate in form with yellowish to lime-green flowers. To be fair, I feel that this is a plant for the larger garden, as it really takes up quite a lot of space and flowers for a comparatively short time — and also really needs staking. However, as this is a book about flowers that I would like to have in the garden and for arranging, I am anxious to include it here.

Cultivation

This is a hardy perennial, easily raised from seed. It will grow in any good garden soil in sun or partial shade. Cut the old stems down to ground level in the autumn.


Conditioning and preserving

Give a long drink in deep warm water. The seed heads dry well if hung upside down in a warm place. Get some advice from your florist the next time you get a flower delivery Briarwood if at all unsure.

Arranging

It is lovely to mix with a group of yellow and white flowers, and I find that one or two stems really add so much to a small mixed summer flower arrangement. The seed heads are pretty whether used when green or allowed to dry completely, turning brown.

Additional information
If you love flowers as much as we do you may also enjoy Florist News. Another blog dedicated to bringing you the very best florist information on the internet.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Countdown to flower wars

The Florists' Workbox

Glue pots are a more recent development, glue sticks being melted in a special heated into which stems can be dipped.


Spray paints are available in a wide range of colours. They can safely be used on fresh and dried flowers, and containers and bases. Surface sealers, cleaners, flame retardants and leaf shine are also available in aerosol cans.

A plastic workbox is ideal for storing and carrying all the necessary equipment. It holds everything neatly in place, and is light and easy enough for all florists Beeliar to take out on contracts.

Easy-Care Cut Bulbs

Flowers cut from bulbs are unusually easy to care for. Unlike annuals and most other perennials, they do not need deep water, nor do they seem to benefit from the addition of cut-flower pre­servatives. Even a shallow dish can be used for arrangements so long as the end of each stem is submerged in clean water. Anemones, tulips and ranunculuses can frustrate flower ar­rangers because the flowers and their stems bend toward the light no matter what position they are arranged in. The bending seems at­tractive to me, for a few gracefully curved stems add rhythm and charm to a flower arrangement. If you want the stems to stay in a certain position, you can wire them as East Cape florists do. Flowers cut from spring bulbs do not last long, chiefly because indoor temperatures are so much warmer than those outdoors. How­ever, if you set the flowers each night on a porch or some other spot that is as cool as possible (so long as it is above freezing), you can add several days to the life of the arrangements.

Plan your event




To make an event fabulous, you must organize and plan. Always know where you are going to be placing your flowers and how many arrangements you will need. Florists are great at helping you categorize and outline your feelings and personalities into flowers. This creates mood when you are entertaining your guests. Florists can also point out things that you may have overlooked. All of the little details, like planning and being in control, contribute to the making of a wonderful day!

Florists can be a tremendous asset in helping you in designing and creating magical flowers for your special occasion. Whether a birthday party, wedding, or anniversary many florists are willing to plan any event for you. They can also help you create the appropriate mood for business functions or a more somber statement such as a funeral. After reading these tips, you can be confident that you will save money and time when you choose a good reliable florist.

If you put these tips for hiring a florist into action, you will be rewarded with exceptional results, not to mention beautiful flowers El Cajon.




Flower arrangement for the speaker's table

This impressive arrangement is designed for a guest speaker’s table at a business, civic or social function, when it can be used to hide notes, or conceal microphones. The arrangement may also be positioned on a top table at other occasions, such as a luncheon, banquet, or wedding reception. The design should draw the eye to the top table.


Initially, this may appear to be a faced design, but in fact it must look attractive from all angles and the materials should be placed on different levels. Position the design at the centre of the table, close to the front edge. Flowers and foliage should then trail over the edge if the florist Southall has done a good job arranging this. The speaker and other VIPs should be able to see over the arrangement, however, and it must not hide them from their audience.


A Line Arrangement

A sense of rhythm is essential to all types of arrangement. A curved line has a rhythm, and takes the eye through the design. Here, the repetition of the gerbera flowers leads the eye through the design, and this rhythm and movement is reinforced by loops of bear grass. The whole design is given a visual weight and strength with the use of the Gaultheria shallon foliage at the base of the arrangement.

A line arrangement is the basis of many other designs, the line or focal area forming the nucleus around which traditional and freestyle designs are formed.


Suitable flowers

A line arrangement demands bold single flowers, such as gerberas, carnations, roses or chrysanthemum blooms. These are then balanced by large bold leaves, and the effect is completed with fine material, such as twigs, reeds, or bear grass.

This type of design is ideal for a buffet table, where the flowers Fishponds are held above the food, and it can look attractive on a reception desk. Line arrangements also work ideally when paired on either side of an altar.

Revitalize Dried Flowers

Dried flowers can be revitalized with misted water or a bit of steam. Dried material that is brittle or has been bundled tightly together can be misted with water from a spray bottle to soften it. If the material is still tightly bunched, remove the rubber band or wire from the stems and lightly mist the upper portion while separating the stems. Do not soak the material, as it will become soggy and difficult to use. Be sure to allow the flowers to dry completely before using.

The blossom size of dried flowers with layers of petals such as roses and peonies can be made larger by holding the blossom over hot steam, then gently teasing the petals open with a small, firm paintbrush. Repeat the process until the blossom is opening to your satisfaction. Do not force the petals as they can tear or separate from the blossoms. Potpourri oil can be added to the steam to infuse the blossom with a delicate fragrance.


To prevent the shedding of petals, spray the finished arrangement with a light coat of sealer. There are products made especially for this purpose and can be found in a North Birmingham flower shop.


Wedding flowers are crucial


One of the most important elements to get right with any wedding is the flowers. Believe me, this is not an easy thing to do, particularly when you'll have a thousand and one other things on your mind on the run up to the big day. Choosing wedding flowers is mostly a girl thing but try and get some male input as well, just for a more balanced view of what to get. Whilst you might not consider other opinions when sending flowers through a florist, wedding flowers are more critical, and the more opinions you can get the better.


Flowers are an integral part of your special day. Flowers are one of many things that your guests will talk to their friends about. There are many options available to you, just discuss them with your reseller of flowers St Fagans Perth. With a little planning, your experience with your wedding flowers can be a pleasant one that stays with you forever. Looking back through your wedding photographs in years to come will be all the more pleasant if those flowers were ‘just perfect’!


A Perfect Marriage


It is always tempting to choose the flowers for your garden by their appearance alone, but, as in choosing a spouse, you need to be aware of what is unseen before you take the plunge. The thousands of different garden species vary widely in their growth and blooming habits, and each has different needs that must be met in order to thrive. With their stunning photos, garden catalogs are fun and inspirational, and it takes a strong will to resist reaching for your checkbook when they arrive early in the winter. The descriptions tend to be enthusiastic, especially those for new cultivars that are just being introduced into the garden trade. Chances are, there is a Picton flowery delivery service near your residence. You will be much better off, however, if you wait to see a plant for yourself, or at least do some research on it, before you spend your money.


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 Columbus each year!

Further reading
Thanks for reading the post, we hope you enjoyed these great flower facts and tips. If you're a florist, or looking to become one, you may also enjoy Florist News which has even more information for you.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Let's do dinner - I'll bring the flowers

Avoid Wedding woes


There is such a huge range of choices available when it comes to wedding flowers that it is easy to become overwhelmed by it all. Do you want the formal look of roses and orchids, or the more casual feel of wildflowers with a seasonal garden style bouquet? What colors do you want, what size and shape of bouquet for yourself and your attendants? The best place to start, and its free, is to visit your local library and look at books and magazines for ideas on flower styles and trends. Doing a little homework before meeting with an Crew's Hole florist can be a great help for you and the florist.

Starting Seed Indoors


Many of the everlasting annual flowers take three months or more to flower when grown from seed. You can give them a jumpstart by planting them indoors in late winter. In my area I begin about Feb­ruary. Growing from seed is a time-consuming, yet truly rewarding, process. You must fol­low some simple steps to assure your success. Start by purchasing a good sterile pot­ting medium from a florist Wembley. This potting me­dium must be thoroughly moist, but not soaking wet. Place it in potting trays or individual plastic pots. Next, check your seed packages for the needs of the individual seed. Some larger seeds must be nicked or soaked before planting. Most of the larger seeds will need to be covered with about ¼ inch of the medium. However, some require light to germinate and need nothing but a gentle tamping onto the medium sur­face. After you have planted according to the packet direc­tions, spritz lightly with water and cover the tray or flat with a large plastic bag or plastic dome cover.

Pleasure your woman


Armed with the following great advice you can't go wrong. Put those corn chips down now and pick up the phone to your local florist to get the ball rolling. If you want to put a great big smile on the face of a special female all you have to do is send her some flowers. Whilst this advice doesn't come with any money back guarantees, we're fairly confident that if you send flowers Hope Valley to a woman, she'll love you forever! Have you ever met a woman who didn't just adore receiving flowers? If you have please let us know because that is a very rare creature indeed.



Cut flower alternative


You may want to consider sending a very different type of flower the next time you have the need, such as a potted plant. This way, your gift will continue to remind that lucky someone of the event the flowers were sent to commemorate long after a fresh bouquet would be a distant memory. If you are sending flowers to someone who has difficulty keeping plants alive, you may want to try sending a dried floral arrangement instead. Always ask your florist for the best advice before committing to an order or placing your flower delivery Carntyne. Potted plants can be tremendous value for money considering the length of time the recipient will have to enjoy them.

Sowing Annuals


Because many annuals like cooler weather, you can get a jump on sowing their seeds. For example, larkspur, bache­lor's buttons, Iceland poppies and nigella all prefer direct sowing in early spring or late winter. Try sowing the seeds of these plants in late autumn in colder areas, because they will begin their growth in the cooler temperatures of early spring. Most annuals are sown after danger of frost in the spring. (In warmer southern climates they can be sown in fall.)

If you don't want to grow your own annuals from seed, you can purchase flats of seedlings ready to pop into the gar­den from a Burnage flower shop. Most flower shops, however, don't carry the more unusual annual varieties. If you are looking for some different an­nuals, you will probably need to sow your own seed. Try some of the many specialty catalogs that cater to the dried-flower lover, or collect and save your favorite seeds to use the next year. Some annuals have the habit of self-sowing and will re­turn to the garden year after year. These self-sowers are easy to eradicate if unwanted but, if left to grow, will add a charm and softness to any garden.

Forcing

Some varieties of virtually all the spring-flowering bulbs, including tulips, hyacinths, crocuses, daffodils and bulbous irises, can be persuaded to bloom indoors in winter, bringing the garden into the house from early January through April. Many Morningside Circle florists and a good many amateurs refer to the techniques as "forcing." Though I use the term myself, I rather dislike it, for no force is involved. The procedures consist, broadly, of manipulating temperatures and light conditions to simulate the period of cold needed by bulbs for their annual rest period, then awakening them earlier than they would wake by themselves if they were outdoors. The techniques for forcing should not be confused with the care of regular house plants that are allowed to bloom in their own good time indoors.



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. Ione florists everywhere will often convey tales of the real power of flowers, which is of course their ability to melt a girl's heart.


Easy flower arranging


The following are a few guidelines supplied by a very friendly Abilene Florist to help anyone considering flower arranging as a hobby:



  • Maintain a balance by imagining a vertical line in the centre. Place similar flowers on both sides at the same angle by placing longer stemmed flowers closer to the line. This will provide a more symmetrical look and is more pleasing to the eye.


  • Choose a good variety colors by balancing both dark and light colors. Do not place all dark colored flowers together and do not place them all at the top as this will appear darker in light. Create a well balanced colour scheme.


Roadside Finds

Many wildflowers that bloom in open meadows and alongside busy highways dry easily and add a certain informal charm to your arrangements. Most of these plants are best left grow­ing in the wild because they tend to be invasive in a garden. Planting them in the garden can mean hours of removal and their certain return the follow­ing year. Queen Anne's lace is one such plant better left along the road. While its lovely, lacy flowers are unmatched for their delicate beauty, it is consid­ered a weed by most Hunters Point florists. Solidago (goldenrod) is another invasive wildflower, but its showy, tall, yellow flowers dry beautifully. If you know that a plant is considered a weed or is in tremendous abundance such as Queen Anne's lace, collect some, but not all, of the flowers. Allow a good number of flowers to remain to reseed for next sea­son. Carefully cut the flower heads of perennials, using cau­tion not to disturb the roots.


Additional information
If you love flowers as much as we do you may also enjoy Florist Files. Another blog dedicated to bringing you the very best florist information on the internet.

 
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