Arkansas Online

Do-it-yourself floral arrangements

AT HOME/OPINION MARNI JAMESON Marni Jameson is the author of six home and lifestyle books, including “What to Do With Everything You Own to Leave the Legacy You Want.”

A few months ago, I wrote about the not-so-pretty side of the floral industry. I learned, in addition to the fact that it’s not all a bed of roses, that the quality of flowers you and I can buy at Costco, Trader Joe’s and some grocery stores, is as good or better than what the floral shops buy. The key difference between our buying flowers directly and florists buying them is that they know what do to with them.

Great floral design is an art. When you want to send flowers for a special occasion, or you’re having one yourself, like a wedding, you want a fantastic floral designer on the job. But what about those in between times, those weeks when you just want to add a little graciousness to your living?

Buying store-bought flowers is an easy way to do that. To find out how to take that grocery store bunch from meh to wow I picked the brains of two top floral designers.

Barbara King owns Valley Forge Flowers, in Wayne, Pa.

“Our customers often say, ‘I don’t want it to look like came from a flower shop,’” she said, laughing.

“So the goal is to try to look like you didn’t try?” I asked, to be clear.

“Pretty much,” she said. Steve Rittner is a third-generation florist who teaches floral design classes at Rittners School of Floral Design, in Boston.

Here’s what they said we could do to increase the ooh and ahh factor of store-bought flowers:

Add something from your own yard. “If the flowers you take home from the grocery store have an FTD look about them,” King said, “go outside, cut something from the yard and stick it in the arrangement. You will transform the arrangement into one that looks organic and bring your outdoors inside.”

Visit the herb garden. If you grow herbs in your yard, snip sprigs of rosemary, thyme, parsley, etc. If you don’t grow herbs, visit the produce aisle of your grocery store. Adding herbs to a floral arrangement is especially nice for dining room centerpieces because the herbs’ smell complements the meal.

Cut stems short. Create a chic arrangement by cutting the stems short, so flowers fall just above the rim of the vase in a mound that is low and compact. Replace the typical fern leaf that comes with the bunch with vinca vine or other less-expected greenery.

Add a seasonal flourish. When putting flowers in a clear vase, embellish the water with crab apples (fall), cranberries (winter) and slices of citrus (summer). Perk up a bouquet of boring mums by nesting in small bunches of colored cauliflower or fall leaves, King said. Glass stones and pebbles dropped into clear containers can also add color, texture and interest.

Choose alternate containers. An interesting vase will automatically increase the design, Rittner said. Collect several pretty vases a cut above mason jars. Search your cookware for a wine chiller or soup tureen. Keep nonwaterproof containers from leaking by inserting a clear vase, a thin plastic liner or even a plastic bag into the vessel.

Branch out. Whether you have bouquets of hydrangea, roses, sunflowers or a mixed bunch, you can never go wrong adding “branchy stuff,” Rittner said. Curly willow, birch branch, kiwi vine, or eucalyptus will instantly make an arrangement look larger and more interesting.

Arrange in hand. For a natural “hand-picked” look, arrange flowers in your hand, Rittner said. Lay flowers across one palm and hold them like a nosegay. Adjust them until you like the mix. Tie stems with a pipe cleaner or raffia. Then cut the stems and drop them in water.

Don’t fear the foam. Foambased arrangements let you put flowers where you want and hold them there. Soak floral foam in water for five minutes, and cut it to fit snugly in your container. If you let it stick up half an inch or more over the rim, you can add stems horizontally. When pushing stems into the foam, hold the freshly cut stem low and feed it into the wet foam gently. Don’t hold the stem high and jam it in or you can clog it.

Don’t sniff at fakes. “Using artificial flowers used to be a big no-no,” King said, “but they are so superior now. They look real, and even feel real. It’s such a trick of the eye, even professionals can’t spot them.”

Moss it over. Because the underpinnings of foam-based arrangements aren’t always pretty, cover your mechanics with a layer of moss, Rittner said. You can find Spanish or sheet moss at floral supply or hobby stores.

Don’t get hung up on rules. Some say you can only mix tropical flowers with tropical flowers. Others get snobby about mixing expensive with inexpensive flowers. Nonsense, Rittner said. “You can mix protea with roses, or bird of paradise with bells of Ireland, and come up with really interesting floral art. And I won’t hesitate to mix hydrangea with inexpensive carnations.”

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2021-09-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-09-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

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