I love this trend. So when I found myself with a few extra flowers from an order earlier this week, I decided to make a little ombre arrangement for our house.
Ombre: According to Merriam -Webster, ombre means "having colors or tones that shade into each other..." I love how this shading looks in floral designs, it seems to bring out the subtle tones in flowers that you might not otherwise notice.
By the way, that calla lily was grown LOCALLY, in OREGON by Oregon Coastal Flowers!!!! Yahoo!!!! Local flowers are starting to come into the market! Spring is on it's way, folks!
And speaking of spring and local flowers, the Botanique Seasonal Subscription is starting in April! This subscription brings you eight weeks of locally-grown, gorgeously arranged flowers. Know someone with a spring birthday? Why not give them flowers for eight whole weeks? I betcha they would love that. Check it out here.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Monday, March 12, 2012
A wonderful article about Botanique, written by Debra Prinzing!
EXCITING NEWS!!! The fabulous Garden and Design author Debra Prinzing wrote a story about Botanique and The Botanique Seasonal Subscription! It is posted on the blog for her new book The 50 Mile Bouquet. CLICK HERE to go over to The 50 Mile Bouquet Blog now to read her article about Botanique!
And, if you are a lover of local, seasonal flowers and floral design, you MUST check out her new book- it is going to be absolutely stunning. The 50 Mile Bouquet will be published on April 1st, and you can pre-order a copy here.
Thank you Debra for such a wonderful article, and for being such an advocate for local, seasonal flowers and floral designers!
And, if you are a lover of local, seasonal flowers and floral design, you MUST check out her new book- it is going to be absolutely stunning. The 50 Mile Bouquet will be published on April 1st, and you can pre-order a copy here.
Thank you Debra for such a wonderful article, and for being such an advocate for local, seasonal flowers and floral designers!
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Flower Growers School
Last weekend I had the incredible opportunity to attend a Specialty Cut Flower Growers School put on by The Seattle Wholesale Growers Market and Washington State University Mt. Vernon Research and Extension Center. I learned SO MUCH in the two days of the workshop- everything from crop selection, seed starting, harvest and post-harvest flower care, hoophouse and greenhouse construction and crops, succession planting, business planning, crop costing, beneficial insects and dealing with pests in a sustainable manner.... the list goes on and on. It was a conference full of super helpful and pertinent information, and it left me so inspired and ready for the next phase of The Botanique Cutting Garden, the 500 sq. ft. area in our backyard that is rapidly turning into a mini, urban flower farm! I feel like I am only just beginning to digest the smallest little fraction of what I learned, and can't possibly fit it all into one blog post. So for now I will just share some photos of one of my favorite parts of the weekend, a tour of Jello Mold Farm in Mt. Vernon, where the second day of the workshop took place.
| The hellebore beds at Jello Mold Farm- LOVE THE HELLEBORES!!! |
| One of my favorites, love that dark purple, grape juice color |
| Columbine, just starting to poke up through straw mulch. |
Thursday, February 16, 2012
RED
Two centerpiece mock-ups for a wedding I am doing this June.... very different styles, very different color palettes, but both are very RED.
Centerpiece #1 features deep RED roses, carnations, and snapdragons, scarlet spray roses and ranunculus, dusty miller and agonis foliage, and, my personal favorite, black pussy willow.
Centerpiece #2 features the same deep RED roses and carnations, Spicy Roses (the burnt orange roses), a few sprigs of eucalyptus, coral bark maple twigs, and a few orange parrot tulips:
The jury is still out on which design will be selected! Which would you choose?
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
One more arrangement before we hit the road....
Tomorrow, Eli and I are heading off to Breitenbush Hot Springs- yes!!!! But before we go, a few shots of an arrangement I made today for a friend's booth at the NW Flower and Garden Show.
Please excuse the blurriness... there was gorgeous light spilling into the basement when I went to grab a crate to pack this bad boy up, and so I decided to "get crafty" with my photography and take a photo in a location other than that trusty fence you may have started to recognize from almost. every. flower. photo. I. take.
But then I got frustrated with my camera (which was not doing such a great job of focusing this low-light situation) and had to take the photo operation outside to.... you guessed it- the fence!
Ahhh, the fence, where there always seems to be just enough natural light...
Ranunculus, Acacia, Dusty Miller, Eucalyptus, Pussy Willow and Drumstick Allium.
Enjoy the weekend and Valentines Day! Botanique is NOT taking Valentines Day orders, but I will be working at Terra Bella Flowers on V-Day, so if you want flowers for your sweetie I recommend you get them there!
Please excuse the blurriness... there was gorgeous light spilling into the basement when I went to grab a crate to pack this bad boy up, and so I decided to "get crafty" with my photography and take a photo in a location other than that trusty fence you may have started to recognize from almost. every. flower. photo. I. take.
But then I got frustrated with my camera (which was not doing such a great job of focusing this low-light situation) and had to take the photo operation outside to.... you guessed it- the fence!
Ahhh, the fence, where there always seems to be just enough natural light...
Ranunculus, Acacia, Dusty Miller, Eucalyptus, Pussy Willow and Drumstick Allium.
Enjoy the weekend and Valentines Day! Botanique is NOT taking Valentines Day orders, but I will be working at Terra Bella Flowers on V-Day, so if you want flowers for your sweetie I recommend you get them there!
Monday, February 6, 2012
February's Hellebores
Oh spring, oh spring, could it be true? Are you here yet? This weekend brought two 60 degree days, and it sure felt like spring. This weekend also brought the first crocus and snowdrop sightings of the year, and the first arrangement of 2013 made with with flowers from the cutting garden!
Dusty Miller, Green Amaranth, Green Berzillia, Pussy Willow from the Vashon Island Adventure of a few weeks back, and the infamous HELLEBORE.
If you can find a place to plant a few hellebores in your garden, I would strongly recommend that you do!!!! They are without a doubt one of my favorite plants- gorgeous flowers in FEBRUARY, when almost nothing else is in bloom. Depending on the variety, they come in an assortment of different shades of rose, plum, white, cream and chartreuse. The variety I have growing right now is Helleborus niger 'Joseph Lemper-" the flowers are pure white, and as they go to seed the blooms turn a light, lime green color, with the backs of the petals turning dusty rose. They are truly gorgeous...
Most often they are billed as shade plants- they will bloom and thrive in the shade, however I have also found them to be extremely durable and unfussy in the sun- in one of my gardening clients homes, they are part of a completely drought tolerant parking strip that receives NO irrigation- and they bloom and grow like nobody's business. You can cut back the foliage in late fall, or leave it through winter and cut it back in early spring when they start to bloom (I am a fan of the latter method as their evergreen foliage is a nice addition to a winter garden). Plant a few- trust me, you will LOVE them.
Dusty Miller, Green Amaranth, Green Berzillia, Pussy Willow from the Vashon Island Adventure of a few weeks back, and the infamous HELLEBORE.
If you can find a place to plant a few hellebores in your garden, I would strongly recommend that you do!!!! They are without a doubt one of my favorite plants- gorgeous flowers in FEBRUARY, when almost nothing else is in bloom. Depending on the variety, they come in an assortment of different shades of rose, plum, white, cream and chartreuse. The variety I have growing right now is Helleborus niger 'Joseph Lemper-" the flowers are pure white, and as they go to seed the blooms turn a light, lime green color, with the backs of the petals turning dusty rose. They are truly gorgeous...
Most often they are billed as shade plants- they will bloom and thrive in the shade, however I have also found them to be extremely durable and unfussy in the sun- in one of my gardening clients homes, they are part of a completely drought tolerant parking strip that receives NO irrigation- and they bloom and grow like nobody's business. You can cut back the foliage in late fall, or leave it through winter and cut it back in early spring when they start to bloom (I am a fan of the latter method as their evergreen foliage is a nice addition to a winter garden). Plant a few- trust me, you will LOVE them.
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