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You are here: Home / Archives for Floral Displays

Using perennials

August 9, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

If you are thinking of creating a cutting garden, consider perennials as well as or even instead of annuals.

The blog at “Flowers, Arrangements, Design” discusses this subject and shares some thoughts on cut flower garden design with a simple plan that many can use or adapt to suit their needs.

Perennial border in September

Perennial border in September

The picture of the herbaceous border opposite was taken in Mid September and there is still a wealth of blooms and foliage available.

Tall blue Echinops will even keep for winter displays whilst the lilac asters and white Anemone Japonica are always good as cut flowers.

A great many cut flower gardens use vast quantities of annuals, sown from seed each spring.  These often give months of blooms but the season can be short lived. Many hours of sowing, pricking out and planting can be needed to get the best from the season.

Perennials not only provide year round interest and structure but give the flower arranger a longer season and foliage.

Even the seed heads of flowers look good in autumn and winter arrangements and evergreen foliage is always useful for bulking up a display and adding structure.

Perennials flower year after year and the regular cutting process forces the plant to put on more growth, often creating a second flush of blooms in the year and resulting in a larger plant the following season, which in turn will yield more flowers or foliage.

A wider range of flowers is available throughout the year and because perennials bloom at different times, your arrangements become more seasonal.

More information

Flowers, Arrangements, Design – Blog site dedicated to floral displays, gardens and ladscape





Filed Under: Design Tagged With: Asters, Autumn And Winter, Bloom, Blooms, Cut Flower, Cut Flowers, Cutting Garden, Different Times, Echinops, Evergreen Foliage, Floral Displays, Flower Arranger, Flower Garden Design, Flower Gardens, Flowers Arrangements, Herbaceous Border, Japonica, Perennial Border, Perennials, Simple Plan

Grow Your Own Cut Flowers

July 5, 2008 by admin Leave a Comment

Growing your own cut flowers can be quite inexpensive and does not have to take up too much time or space.

A couple of packets of sweet peas will provide arm fulls of blooms and can be grown against a sunny wall, fence or obelisk.
Cosmos are excellent value for money providing blooms from June through September and even October.  Ranging from white, many shades of pink and even yellows and oranges, there is one to suit every arrangement.  Their delicate feathery foliage form a feathery backdrop to other flowers in the garden and give softness to floral displays.
Garden Pinks are the wonderfully fragrant, more delicate version of the mass produced large carnation and can last up to two weeks in the vase.  Perennial versions which flower year after year are normally bought as young plants, but can be raised from seed.
Annual versions which flower for only one season are grown from seed.
There are literally hundreds of flowers to choose from, saving a small fortune in bought flowers and providing blooms that are not only diifferent and seasonal, but many of them have a magnificent perfume so often lacking in commercial imported blooms.
To find a fantastic variety of seeds and plants visit Marshalls Seeds.




Filed Under: Cultivation Tagged With: Backdrop, Blooms, bulbs, Carnation, Cut Flowers, Feathery Foliage, Floral Displays, flowers, Fulls, Growing Flowers, Obelisk, Oranges, Perfume, pinks, seeds, Shades, Small Fortune, Softness, sweet pea, Sweet Peas, Vase, Wall Fence, Yellows
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