Sunday, September 4, 2011

Make flowers your best friend

Pruning New Bushes
Some gardeners feel that the planting operation is not complete until they have pruned their newly set bushes. Generally speaking, this practice is unwise. Before a rosebush is marketed, the upper plant is usually trimmed at the nursery to bring it into balance with the roots, which cannot support a larger top until they make new growth. Most newly set bushes require no further pruning at planting time, and should not be pruned for a full year. However, some bushes suffer minor injury during Toluca Lake flower delivery or planting, and these may be pruned a little to compensate for the damage. If you have trimmed off two or three broken root ends while planting a particular bush, it is advisable to prune the longer canes of the upper plant slightly to bring it back into balance with the reduced root system. But the pruning of newly set plants (indeed of all the rose plants in your garden) should be done with great restraint.

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 Archer City 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.

Other cutting tools, tapes and wires
Secateurs: These are excellent for cutting thick woody stems.
Florists’ tape: This is used to conceal wires and seal stem ends. There are two main types of tape — the first is plastic and stretches, the warmth of your hand helping to secure it. The second type resembles crêpe paper, but is usually slightly sticky. The tapes are supplied in a variety of colours — green, brown, black, white and a range of pastel shades. Green is normally used with fresh materials, and brown with dried flowers.
Florists’ wire: This is used to support, control and anchor materials, lengthen stems and reduce weight. Always wire internally wherever possible, and use the finest gauge of wire that will give sufficient support. The larger the number, the thicker the gauge of a stub wire, the most popular. There is a wide variety of tapes available to the florist and it is a matter of personal preference which is used.
Glue guns are a comparatively recent, but now important, development in the floristry industry, performing numerous tasks effortlessly and securely — for example, attaching foam to containers and wall swags, ribbon to foam bases, or flowers Howard Park into bouquet holders.
Glue guns are divided into two types — hot and cool melt. The latter is ideal for attaching synthetic ribbons, which might otherwise melt, and the former is used for all other tasks.

Winter’s Flowers-to-order
When winter comes, flowering bulbs prove a boon to indoor gardeners. Tropical bulbs such as the large-flowered hippeastrums are familiar as house plants and easy to grow indoors. So are clivias and cyclamens, though they demand night temperatures of 50° to 55°. With a little extra effort, you can induce many spring-flowering garden bulbs to bloom in winter. Most need a period of cold before they flower and are often started outdoors in cold frames. But by selecting varieties of bulbs to arrive at your doorstep via Blackley flower delivery, such as tulips, hyacinths and daffodils, and by moving the plants into light and warmth a group at a time, you can enjoy a four-month show.

Hat and Handbag Sprays
These designs are a variation on the corsage spray, but in this case attached to a customer’s hat or handbag. A traditional corsage spray is the design usually worn by most lady guests at a wedding. For the customer who requires something a little different, however, this type of design offers an attractive alternative. Always ask to see the customer’s hat or handbag, as you can then advise on the most suitable style of decoration and method of attachment. Carefully explain to your customer the various methods of attaching the spray, and always gain her permission.
This type of design is particularly appropriate if the customer is wearing a highly patterned and brightly coloured dress on which flowers would not be seen, or if the dress is made of a lightweight fabric, so that pinning a corsage could be difficult and, worse still, might mark the fabric. The hat or bag should be brought to the florist Larkspur shop a few days before the occasion, and carefully labeled and stored.
Attaching a spray to a hat
For security, discreetly sew the spray to the hat. For a handbag, either tie the spray to the bag with ribbon, or use a taped, ribbon- covered wire, attaching the spray to the wire and then securing the wire ends together under the flap of the bag.

Bulb Soil Preparation
Preparation of the soil for spring-flowering bulbs follows the same steps as those for all bulbous plants. But where the earth is heavy and largely clay, an inch or two of coarse sand dropped into the bottom of each bulb hole will assure the fast growth of a good root system. A florist East Melbourne will usually encourage the bulbs by placing a teaspoon of bone meal mixed thoroughly into the sand or soil at the bottom of the hole.
After you have planted your bulbs, be sure to soak the soil thoroughly. The water will wash the soil in around the bulbs, eliminating air spaces, and will start the bulbs rooting. Because of their hardiness, none of the spring bulbs needs protection against cold after planting if set at the proper depth. But they do need protection then and in later years against unseasonable warmth: wherever alternate freezing and thawing occur, the soil will heave, and this movement can damage roots by shifting the bulbs. An aboveground layer of mulch, applied after the soil has frozen at least 2 inches deep, will usually keep the ground hard and eliminate this danger. The best mulches for this purpose are 5 or 6 inches of salt hay, 2 to 3 inches of pine needles, 2 inches of buckwheat hulls, sawdust, wood shavings or bark, or a thatching of evergreen boughs 6 to 12 inches deep. If you use salt hay or evergreen mulch, be sure to lift away the mulch before the bulbs' stems peep aboveground the following spring; if you wait too long, you may damage the tender shoots. If by chance they have sprouted, lift the mulch with a tined fork, not a rake.

Golden wedding anniversary
There is something very special about those couples who have been married for 50 years. Over the next decade, florists will see couples who were married during, or just after, the war years, when flowers and fabrics for wedding dresses were scarce.
These couples will now be in their seventies, and the mellow golds, bronzes and oranges of the flowers in this golden wedding anniversary design are an apt colour harmony for fifty years of marriage. Softly- coloured gerberas blend with roses, lilies, chrysanthemums and carnations in this upright basket. The addition of a greetings card would complete the picture.
To customers ordering flowers, suggest designs that are easy to look after or require little or no arranging, unless, of course, one of the recipients is a flower arranger. With other wedding anniversaries, good florists Droitwich will choose a container, accessory or, perhaps, a colour combination that reflects the nature of the anniversary. The first, or cotton anniversary, could include natural stems of cotton-wool seed heads; for the twentieth, you might have dainty flowers in a china vase.