Sunday, June 14, 2009

Keeping the florist flame alive

Mother’s Day

This is one of the most important, and busiest, occasions in the florist’s calendar. At Christmas, customers accept that arrangements will be sent out throughout the week preceding the event, but Mother’s Day arrangements must go out on the Saturday and Sunday, resulting in long working hours for florists and their drivers.

Mother’s Day has evolved from the time when many people were in service and away from home. On just one day a year they were allowed to visit their families, the fourth Sunday in Lent being chosen because it marked the end of fasting, so families could celebrate and feast together.


A florist Arnos Vale will sell flowers in many styles for Mother’s Day, from gift-wrapped bunches for mothers who enjoy arranging their own flowers, to handtied bunches, ready to be placed in a vase.

Arrangement Spacing

It is important to leave space between flowers because you do not want them to appear crowded. Be sure your eye can move in and out of an arrange­ment. The most interesting dis­play will have one flower peeking out from behind an­other, with a third almost hid­den in the depths, and a fourth springing out from behind them even to the edge of the arrangement. For arrangements that will be displayed on mantels or other high points, use some flowers with stems that droop. Secure the foam base so that it peeks out about ¼ inch over the top of the container. Then place short-stemmed flowers to loll over the rim. Visit some Walthamstow florists for examples of proper spacing, and you will see that this same tech­nique is also useful for centerpieces.

As you near the end, care­fully appraise the arrangement. Do you need another flower here or there, or do you have enough? Should you take a flower away? If a flower seems out of place, take it out. But be careful not to disturb the arrangement. The easiest way to remove it may be to snip off the stem where it won't show, instead of pulling out the whole flower.

Available foods


Many brands of flower food are available, and there are also various dispensing systems. All are aimed at prolonging the vase life of cut flowers, and the final choice will depend on individual preference. Flower foods are also manufactured for specific types of cut materials. Shrub and bulb flowers can have their own food, and bouvardia flowers often arrive with their own ‘personal’ sachet. A liquid food is the most recent method to become available in bulk form to florists. A dispensing pump makes it easy to measure the correct amount.

Another way of providing flowers Beaumont with nutrients uses a label containing the additives. This is simply dropped into tepid water, which is mixed with sugar. With each method, it is essential that all the ingredients are measured accurately, following the producer’s instructions, and mixed thoroughly.



Christmas Tree

You can buy a tree-shaped form made of Styrofoam, wire or grapevines from a florist Swinton. Dried material can be tucked into the forms or glued on top of them. Use a base material (such as moss, artemisia or baby's breath) first and then add the more colorful flowers as accents. Another method is to purchase a live small tree to use on a tabletop or mantel. Wire together tiny bunches of dried flowers and attach them to the tree. Individ­ual rosebuds, sprigs of baby's breath and colorful dried berries are also nice accents. For a final touch, you might add tiny colored bows or tiny wrapped packages.

Birthday Flowers


Flowers are always a wonderful birthday gift for someone you care about whether a relative, friend or sweetheart. As a special treat and talking point you might wish to select flowers that are associated with the month the recipient was born. These could be part of a mixed arrangement or bouquet or as a feature flower highlighted with foliage. Your florist City Centre will be able to advise you on the best way of presenting the particular flower to suit its colour and characteristics.

There is some variation in the flowers that are associated with each birth month around the world. Here we list flowers generally associated with birth months in Australia.



  • January - Carnation

  • February - Iris

  • March - Jonquil


  • April - Daisy

  • May - Lily of the Valley

  • June - Rose

  • July - Tulip

  • August - Gladiolus or Poppy

  • September - Aster


  • October - Marigold Cosmos

  • November - Chrysanthemum

  • December - Holly or Poinsettia or Orchid



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 Pasadena.




Treating Stems

Stems which bleed

When some flowers are picked, a white ring of thick, milky sap forms on the cut surface. Either place the tips of the stems of these plants in shallow boiling water for thirty seconds or singe the cut tip in a candle flame for a few seconds.

Roses

Remove all the thorns from a rose by rubbing with the back of a pair of secateurs or cutting them from the stem. The exception to this treatment is for the single rose which is going to be displayed in a specimen vase. Excess foliage should also be removed straightaway. Place roses into deep water, but if they are limp, they should be wrapped in a roll of stiff paper first to support the heads.


There are two ways to revive roses that have started to wilt, provided the flower head has not fallen so far to one side that it has cracked the stem tissue. The first is to recut the rose stem and split it, place the tip in boiling water for thirty seconds, then wrap the stem and flower in stiff paper and place the stem in lukewarm water for a long drink. Alternatively, re-cut the stems and submerge the flower and stem in a bath of water for a couple of hours. Consult your local florist Brisbane for advice in this area.

Smelly stems

If you want to use a flower or foliage that is known to smell in water, it is best to isolate it from other material. One way is to wrap the cut stem in wet cottonwool which has been dipped in disinfectant and secure the stem in a polythene bag with a rubber band before putting it with the other material.

Hollow stems Flowers with hollow stems require special treatment as it is difficult for water to get to the flower head. After cutting, turn the flower upside down and fill the stalk with water. Seal the end with your finger until you have placed it in deep water.


Best loved flowers - Cineraria maritima (silver­dust)


Characteristics: The lacy, sil­very foliage of dusty miller makes an interesting contrast in flower borders, rock gardens and containers. The foliage complements and enhances other more colorful annuals such as blue ageratum. Cineraria mari­tima 'Silverdust' grows 9 inches in height and has a finely cut, silvery white foliage with a velvety texture. Chrysanthemum ptarmicaeflorum 'Silver Lace', a less-common form not often available from Edgecliff Village florists, is a more compact plant that grows 7 inches tall and has a more finely cut silvery gray foliage.

Cultural Information: Dusty miller prefers ordinary, well­drained or poor, sandy soil. It thrives in areas that are hot and dry. This hardy annual is long lasting and survives a light frost.

Harvesting/Drying: Dusty miller is wonderful for air-drying. It makes a lovely filler in dried arrangements. Harvest the mature foliage of dusty miller any time during the growing season (just make sure it is dry and free of any excess moisture). Hang small bunches in a warm, dry, dark spot. Hanging will cause the foliage to curl slightly. I have had some success in keeping the foliage pliable by drying the foliage in gylcerine. Another way to retain the natural shape is to press the foliage between pages of a book just as you would press ferns and other flat foliage plants.



The Growth Cycle of Bulbs

In the growth cycle of a bulbous plant, the underground bulb, nourished by its storehouse of food, goes through a number of distinct stages. The bulb sprouts roots, stems, leaves and flowers Oakwood, simultaneously growing larger or producing new bulbs for the following growing season. After the leaves wither, it enters a period of dormancy. All bulbs progress through each of these stages, but the details of the cycle vary among the five major types of bulbous plants: true bulb, corm, tuber, tuberous root and rhizome. The gardener with his spade or lifting fork plays a part in the growth cycle of many of these bulbs. Many of the true bulbs, such as the daffodil, can be left in the ground through the winter in all parts of the country. Most other bulbous plants demand more care during winter dormancy. A corm like the gladiolus, a tuber like the tuberous begonia, and a tuberous root like the dahlia must be dug up in fall and stored in a dry place until spring in areas where the ground freezes. Even in the South such bulbs produce the biggest flowers if dug up, divided and stored until the spring planting season.

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