Showing posts with label floral art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label floral art. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2013

FLOWERS A-Z: R IS FOR (GARDEN) ROSES



In the language of flowers, sometimes the most obvious choice is also the most extraordinary. This week, “r” is naturally for rose! Here, I have chosen to highlight the gorgeous garden rose, an even more fragrant and showy variety than your average rose. In the United States, most regular roses that you find at your local florist or grocery store have been shipped to us from South America (although different species of roses are cultivated all over the world). Garden roses may have a more pedestrian-sounding name (as if someone just threw down some seeds and they sprung up in the garden) and hail from much less exotic locales (primarily California and Texas), but they radiate a unique beauty.
As noted above, garden roses tend to have a more intense and complex fragrance, and they have bigger heads that include many more layers of downy petals. Although garden roses can be pricey ($6 to $8 per stem), they do last well as a cut flower and absolutely bring down the house in any arrangement. Invest in a small bouquet of them during July and August, when garden roses are at their peak. And if you are lucky enough to have your own patch of earth that gets plenty of direct sun and excellent soil drainage, please shut down your computer and run to the nearest nursery for a plant or two.

I have selected two kinds of garden roses to work with this week: Romantic Antike (summer peach shade) and Nostalgie (creme with peach edging). These two varieties are grown in California. I love seeing the different hybrids that farms develop from year to year (the names are often fanciful or inspired by a wife or girlfriend).


Last week, I was walking through a very tony neighborhood and noticed several buildings with phenomenal window boxes happily balanced outside apartment windows. The charm of the soft florals and greens on the stately buildings made me long for the kind of home or studio where this would be possible. So, I was inspired to create an indoor “window box” at the Blossom and Branch studio using garden roses.
This galvanized French tin is one of my favorite containers to use. It was inexpensive and is lightweight. I am going to use floral foam as I did for my Thanksgiving Centerpiece Idea last year. As I mentioned last November, some people dislike using floral foam for a variety of reasons. You can achieve a similar effect using a tape grid.
I always line the container with cellophane prior to using floral foam. This is helpful because you never know whether the seams of the container will leak water. If you are choosing to use tape or chicken wire, try working with a hot glue gun to seal the seams of the container before adding water, and test the container with water before going full steam ahead with your arrangement.
Next, I added my floral foam. The basic principles for using floral foam are: 1. Soak well in fresh water, simply tossing the bricks of foam in a bucket of water and allowing them to submerge (never forcibly submerge the foam, or you will get dry pockets); 2. Try using the biggest pieces of foam you can to fill your container (if you need to fill in corners to make the foam secure, cut smaller chunks but be aware of these flimsy pieces while you are designing); 3. Only place a flower or green in the foam one time (if you end up not liking the placement, take the flower out and make a brand new hole; do not re-use that hole); 4. Place flowers and greens as close to a 90-degree angle as possible while creating your shape (you don’t want stems to cross inside the foam); and 5. Flowers will drink a lot in the foam, so use a watering can to “water” your arrangement frequently. Once you get the hang of working with floral foam, you’ll love how it frees you to create a wide variety of shapes and styles and experiment with arranging new flowers.
I like to start with the “greens,” so I added andromeda first. The structure of the arrangement begins with this first batch of elements.
Next, I added some dusty brown amaranths. I wanted the arrangement to have a washed-out summer feel, so I paired muted tones with the roses.
Electric pink celosia (or cockscomb) fall somewhere between a “face” flower and filler. Because roses are such a strong face flower, I mostly chose blooms and greens that were tubular and would not compete with the round shape. Whenever I design, my primary concerns are with shape and palette. This is why you can substitute whatever flowers are available to you to contrast with the roses — simply hunt for muted tones and tubular shapes to emulate this look.
And then came the roses . . . so magnificent. I also added a few fern curls for whimsy.
You sort of just want to pet this arrangement, right? The textures here are a lot of fun.
When your fresh flower window box dies away, simply replace those flowers with a few sweet summer plantings. If you are unsure of your green thumb or how plants will fare in the various microclimates in your home, simply keep the small plants in their original purchase plastic containers (as opposed to planting them in soil) and place them right in the window box. You can elevate them a bit (perhaps with a wood block?) so they drain when watered. Then cover the surface over with some loose moss to hide your work! That way, if a particular plant fails, you can just remove it and replace it.
Please join me back here for a post from my blogger inspiration's dreamy California hometown, when “s” will be for . . .

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

FLOWERS A-Z: N IS FOR NERINE



Welcome back for another adventure in the floral alphabet!  Today in A-Z, “N” is for the precious and lovely Nerine.  Nerine, sometimes called a “spider lily,” is native to South Africa, although the bulb is now grown throughout the world.  Nerine is in the same family as the perhaps more familiar winter-blooming amaryllis bulb.
Nerine is lightly fragrant and quite simple to use in designs.  The stems have no leaves to be pared and each blossom has several buds that will eventually open and bloom.  Because the nerine has a delicate composition, I like to display it with other more substantial blooms.

Because the nerine are a bold pink hue, I decided to choose a richly colored blue vase for contrast.
I also happened to pick up these completely amazing cornflower blue Dutch hydrangea, which I thought would set a fabulous landscape for the arrangement.  The bulk of these hydrangea will facilitate nerine placement.  You could actually fill out the entire vase with 3-5 hydrangea and then simply add nerine, if you were so inclined.  But you know I prefer to really jeuje, so…
Mustard yellow yarrow will do the trick.  I think this combination of the blue and yellow has a very Country French feel.  Notice I added the yarrow in a cluster, almost forming a strip, just to the left of center in the arrangement.  Particularly when using a shock of bright color, it can be interesting to “color block” in this way.  It adds a modern twist to an arrangement of otherwise classic blooms.  I also worked in a European, pavé style with this arrangement, which works beautifully for displaying the nerine.
Going with a spring theme, I added muted pink parrot tulips (aren’t they outrageous with that green feathering?), blush peonies and soft pink astilbe.  I like how the hydrangea allow the other blooms to nestle right in.
And finally, the nerine (in various stages of opening) along with some baby yellow ranunculus.  In fact, this arrangement might be a wonderful “new baby” gift!  You have your pinks, you have your blues…
With each passing day, the various elements in this arrangement will continue to grow and change shape.  The tulips will literally continue to grow a few inches in water and open up wide, the peonies, ranunculus and nerine will also evolve and bloom.  So, for those wildflower/garden style lovers, your arrangement that started in rather a neat bundle will let its hair down soon enough :)
Enjoy working with spring bulbs of all kinds while we still have them and join me back here tomorrow when “o” will be for…

Wednesday, April 10, 2013


Sometimes in life, things don’t come easy. You have to get creative, make it work, shape your own destiny . . . which is why this week’s A–Z post is “i” is  parrot tulips! I know what you are thinking. You think I got all cute and decided not to feature a flower that actually starts with the letter “i.” Well, you would be correct. But these tulips are so spectacular, and with spring about to burst forth, I couldn’t resist. There were certainly more obvious choices (How about iris, Disha?), but I hope all is forgiven when you feast your eyes on these amazing specimens.
Tulips are bulbous flowers that bloom and dazzle in the spring. They have an expansive native range — from Southern Europe to Northern Africa, Iran and Southern China. In the modern age, they are most closely associated with the Netherlands; the flower fields in Holland are world famous, and a great majority of tulips sold in the US are imported from Dutch growers. The cultivation of tulips for commercial use was actually initiated during the height of the Ottoman Empire in 16th-century Iran and Turkey. Famous Flemish horticulturalist Carolus Clusius is generally credited with introducing tulips to Europe when he planted them at the Imperial Botanical Gardens of Vienna in 1573. Tulips then became all the rage and set off the commercial industry in Holland in 1594 when Clusius planted them for all to see at Leiden University’s new Botanical Garden.
Parrot tulips are a special variety of tulip with a fringed edge. They tend to be more expensive than a simple tulip, but they really are something special. As they open in a warm, indoor environment, they almost look like a living creature. TIP: To force open a cut tulip flower, remove all the foliage, cut the stem at a sharp angle and place in a full vase of very warm water. 

I decided to make a feminine, romantic mixed arrangement with the Irene tulips. I selected a vase with a bell shape to allow the tulips to drape, grow and open over the course of the next few days. Tulips will continue to “grow” a few inches in water after they are cut, so keep that in mind when arranging. Start the arrangement with some fresh greens to provide structure. Try adding all the flowers you select first except the tulips  this will allow you to play with the tulip placement at the end for maximum impact.
I added some sheer pink lisianthus from ISRAEL. “I” is for Israeli lisianthus?
And some variegated scabiosa in a rich, purple hue.
Then some gorgeous ranunculus in that same sheer pink color.
Oh and there are those wild-looking Irenes. Note the contrasting textures; the tulips are sleek and rough looking, while the other blooms are full and delicate.
Spring, we have missed you so dearly.
Join me back here in tomorrow when (please please please) the sun will shine, the birds will chirp and “j” will be for . . .

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