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You are here: Home / Archives for foliage

Autumn Pumpkin Arrangements

October 17, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

To add easy to add an autumnal or Halloween theme your flower arrangements by using pumpkin and squash as containers.

Squash with autumn flowers and foliage

Squash with autumn flowers and foliage

Autumn is a time of wondrous colours and textures, providing the flower arranger with a wealth of materials.

Gourds and squash grow in a myriad of colours and are superb for creating a theme to celebrate the season or perhaps dress a Halloween party table.  Use them in a display or as containers to instantly theme your autumn floral arrangement.

We picked two harlequin squash, an irresistable miniature munchkin pumpkin and a soup bowl sized pumpkin for our displays. These British grown squash were in our local Morrisons supermarket and cost £2.50 in total.

A wander round the garden yielded an armful of branches, foliage and a few of the last flowers from the border. These were put into water straight away to help keep them fresh.

The tops were cut from the squash and the insides scooped out, keeping some of the seeds to grow our own next year and the flesh to make a nice warming pumpkin soup.  It is best to do this a week or so before you want to use them for the arrangements, as they can be allowed to dry, avoiding them turning smelly and sticky inside.

We placed small containers inside the squash, made from yoghurt pots and small dishes.  Putting water directly inside the squash will make it rot.

A small amount of florists oasis was put into each bowl and filled with water.

Calendula arrangement in squash

Using a pumpkin easily themes your arrangement

Golden autumn arrangement

For our first golden arrangement, we took the larger soup bowl sized squash and started by inserting three achillea seed heads, a couple of Blue Hobbit eryngium springs and three calendula flowers.

Blue and orange being at opposing ends of the colour spectrum, always work well together.

A large ficus japonica leaf gives an airy arrangement a little more structure and texture, whilst a piece of variegated fuschia gives height.

The rest was filled in with delicate golden thalictrum leaves and variegated fuschia, with one or two small feathery achillea leaves helping to hide the oasis.

Using the pumpkin as a container for this display, easily gives it a late autumn feel.

Pink arrangement in harlequin squash

Dusky autumn pinks

Pink Harlequin squash display

A few pink achillea, potentilla and escalonia flowers were still blooming, so these were used in the pink arrangement.

A harlequin squash with all the colours of autumn created the base and the arrangement centred around the three pink and purple achillea flowers placed to the centre and sides.

A sprig of escalonia and purple acer give a bit of height.

Small pink potentilla flowers are used around the base and the rest of the display infilled using the variegated fuschia, which has amazing pink tinges to its leaves.

Halloween arrangement

Ideal for a Halloween party table.

Halloween table arrangement

Halloween gives the opportunity to have a bit of fun with flower arrangements and the next display is simply a branch from our miniature lilac, placed into the melon like harlequin squash.

We surrounded the base with small pieces of variegated pieris and then cut out some bats and witches from a piece of black card, threaded them with sewing thread and hung them from the branches.

Members of our website can download an A4 Halloween sillhouettes PDF.  These are designed to be printed on white card. (You may need a black marker pen for the reverse or simply stick two together).

small pumpkin arrangement

Purple acer leaves are an ideal contrast for this small pumpkin

Small Munchkin pumpkin arrangement

Tiny munchkin pumpkins are only about 10cm in diameter but  a few leaves from the purple acer are a dark but delicate contrast to this cute orange pumpkin.

To give a little colour, a single white Iceberg rose was inserted centrally, with a couple of pale lemon flowers from the summer argryanthemums.

This arrangement is only about 20cm high and wide and ideal where space is limited or for a seasonal table decoration.

Small flower arrangements can be just as effective as large displays, if not more so and they only use one or two flowers, making them incredibly cost effective.  They make ideal home made autumn gifts.

Watering your Halloween flowers

Because the oasis is in smalls bowls of water, keep an eye on moisture levels and top up regularly, especially in warmer rooms.

Halloween floral displays such as these are easy to create and a cost effective way of decorating your home.

Flowers and foliage for autumn flower arrangements are available from your florists, many of them are from British growers. Add to these from your garden or country hedgerows to create some stunning seasonal displays.





Filed Under: Design, Features Tagged With: Achillea, Autumn Flowers, Autumn Pumpkin, Calendula Flowers, Colour Spectrum, Eryngium, Ficus, Floral Arrangement, Flower Arrangements, Flower Arranger, foliage, Fushia, Golden Autumn, Gourds, Halloween Party, Halloween Theme, Harlequin, Hobbit, Late Autumn, Morrisons Supermarket, Munchkin, Pumpkin Soup, Sized Pumpkin, Soup Bowl, Squash, Thalictrum, Yoghurt Pots

Andy Sturgeon’s Best in Show

May 27, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Andy Sturgeon took ‘Best in Show’ at the 2010 RHS Chelsea Flower show with his contemporary dry climate garden.

Daily Telegraph Garden at Chelsea 2010

Daily Telegraph Garden at Chelsea 2010

The gold medal winning Daily Telegraph Garden by Andy Sturgeon has a tidy contemporary feel with pathways leading through different areas of shrubs, herbaceous plants, seated areas and architectural structure.

Although the garden has a modern feel, the pale gravel and sectioned areas provide a sense of space but this does not come at the cost of planting, as so many modern gardens do.

Richly planted areas feature perennials and shrubs which can easily provide arms full of cut flowers and foliage.

This idea can easily be scaled to suit the average garden and the architectural aspect can be kept by replacing the metal structures with tall cypress, like those found in Italian landscapes.

More information

RHS Chelsea - Video tour of Andy Sturgeon’s “best in show” garden.
Andy Sturgeon – Landscape and Garden Design





Filed Under: Design Tagged With: Architectural Structure, Chelsea Flower Show, Cut Flowers, Cypress, Daily Telegraph, Dry Climate, foliage, Garden Landscape, Gold Medal, Gravel, Italian Landscapes, Metal Structures, Pathways, Perennials, Plants, Rhs Chelsea Flower Show, Sense Of Space, Shrubs, Sturgeon, Video Tour

Peonies as cut flowers

May 27, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

The large blousy blooms of the Peony make wonderful cut flowers and if picked in bud can last for three or more weeks in a vase.

Picture of Peony in flower

Delicate blooms the size of a small plate

Peonies are native to Europe, Asia and western north America but cope well with the British climate.  Flowering around May and June, the small round buds unfurl to disclose delicate, extravagant blooms ranging from white, through cream and lemon and from palest pink to the deepest burgundy.

Strong stems provide good support in the vase and the flamboyant blooms are great for single display or mixing in a bouquet.

Most Peonies are herbaceous perennials, reaching about 1.5 metres tall.  These totally die back to the ground in winter and regrow in the spring.

Tree Peonies which originated in Asia form a deciduous tree, around 3 metres tall, with some having a delicious fragrance.

Intersectional or Itoh Peonies are a recent development combining the features of the herbaceous and tree varieties.

Growing Peonies

Peonies prefer well drained soil and sunlight.  The tuberous root should only be planted about 5cm below the soil surface.

Wet or windy weather can be a problem, so most peonies require staking to keep the plant looking tidy.

Peony Wilt can affect the plant during wet weather but as the plant dies down over the winter months, the new growth in the spring is often unaffected.

The strong dark leaves of the peony plant provide form and structure in the herbaceous border and they look effective planted alongside Roses, Aquilegia, Nepeta and Penstemon.

Chelsea flower show

Rosie Hardy form Hardy’s cottage garden plants explained to the BBC how to grow Peonies and other garden flowers for a bouquet and Top Mayfair florist Yan Skates won a gold medal for his arrangements featuring British grown garden flowers.

Peony specialists

Binny Plants – Specialist Peony nursery in the UK
Kelway’s – Gold medal winners at Chelsea Flower Show 2010
Claire Austin Hardy Plants – Specialise in Herbaceous, tree and intersectional Peonies.
Hardy’s Cottage Garden Plants

More information

Peony Flowers – More information on peonies as cut flowers, how to cut and condition for extended vase life.

Telegraph article – focusing on Lord Falmouth’s Kent estate, where they grow fields of peonies to sell as cut flowers,

Chelsea flower show – BBC videos from the Chelsea Flower show 2010

The Peony Society - A focus for Peony enthusiasts all over the world.

How to grow Peonies - In depth information on how to get the best from your herbaceous, tree and intersectional Peonies from Claire Austin.





Filed Under: Features Tagged With: Bbc, Bouquet, British Climate, Bud, Chelsea Flower Show, Claire Austin, Cold Winters, Contrary To Popular Opinion, Cottage Garden Plants, Cut Flowers, Dark Leaves, Deciduous Tree, Delicate Blooms, Delicious Fragrance, Falmouth, Flower Show, Flowering Plant Family, foliage, Fragrant Flowers, Full Bloom, Garden Flowers, Genus Paeonia, Gold Medal Winners, Good Companions, Good Soil, Ground Stake, Growing Peonies, Handsome Foliage, Hardy Plants, Herbaceous Border, Herbaceous Perennial Plants, Intersectional Peonies, Kent Estate, Lobed Leaves, Metal Hoops, Nepeta, Paeony, Peonies, Peony, Peony Nursery, Peony Plant, Soil Surface, Spring Tree, Stems, Structure And Form, Telegraph Article, Tree Peonies, Tree Varieties, Tuberous Root, Tuberous Roots, Uk Gardening, Vase, Wet Summers, Wet Weather, Windy Weather, Winter Tree

New from Green & Gorgeous

April 5, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Green and Gorgeous are small-scale cut flower growers based on an organic farm in Oxfordshire, and offering a full on-site bridal consultation service.

Green & Gorgeous cutting garden

Green & Gorgeous cutting garden

All the flowers are grown organically alongside vegetables, fruit and chickens!

After growing and selling organic vegetables for many years. they realised that the same could be done with flowers, as they accumulate just as many air miles and use even more chemicals.

A wide range of flowers and foliage is grown to ensure all the ingredients for a bouquet throughout the seasons.  Growing this range of plants is good organic practice, promoting healthy soil and preventing pest and disease build up.

Green & Gorgeous, specialise in growing traditional, English country garden flowers which are selected for their colour, scent, vase life, novelty and nostalgic value.  Flowers are picked early in the morning, conditioned and stored in a cold room for at least 24 hours prior to delivery.

Visit the Green & Gorgeous website for more information on availability, farmers markets, bridal consultations, vase hire and seasonal bouquets.





Filed Under: Features, Industry Focus Tagged With: Air Miles, Bouquet, Bouquets, Bridal Consultation, Chickens, Cold Room, Consultation Service, Cut Flower, Cutting Garden, Farmers Markets, Flower Growers, foliage, Garden Flowers, Gorgeous Website, Nostalgic Value, Organic Farm, Organic Vegetables, Oxfordshire, Vase Hire, Vase Life

Good News for British Flowers

February 28, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

For many years, the UK has been watching the decline of it’s flower farms, wholesalers and florists, as supermarkets source their flowers from abroad but the Wiggly Florist is bucking the trend.

The three sizes of Wiggly Bouquet

San, Heather and Hannah with the three sizes of bouquet.

There is no doubt that consumers have become more aware and interested in where their flowers are coming from.  Sometimes they are interested in supporting local farmers, sometimes they would like to reduce the amount of air miles.

The argument about carbon footprint and the importance of global trade will continue to be debated, but the last survey estimated that less than 10% of flower sales in the UK were actually grown here, so it’s good to see the consumer redressing the balance.

In the last year, Dutch newspaper Het Financieele Daglad reported that exports to the UK were down 20% and in times of recession, luxury products such as flowers are vulnerable.  However, sales of Wiggly Flowers increased by 10% this year and were particularly strong at Christmas.

Wiggly Wigglers sources it’s flowers from their local wholesaler who is tasked with the challenge of buying British grown product.  On top of this the Wiggly gardens at Blakemere produce their own crop of sunflowers, herbs and extras, whilst sourcing their foliage from less than 2Km away, alongside a network of British flower farmers.

Many UK customers are starting to appreciate traditional blooms such as stocks, phlox, delphiniums, sunflowers and pussy willow and florists are looking to Valentines Day, Mothering Sunday and Easter to sustain the upturn for the British grown flower market.

The Good Life Made Easy
From growing vegetables and planting wildflowers, to floristry that doesn’t cost the earth, plus a great range of composters and much more…..Wiggly Wigglers have all the goodies that any budding Tom or Barbara could ever need and even a few eco gifts to help convince Jerry and Margo too!

More information
Wiggly Wigglers website
Follow Wiggly Wigglers on facebook





Filed Under: Features, Industry Focus Tagged With: Air Miles, Blooms, Carbon Footprint, Composters, Eco Gifts, Flower Farms, Flower Market, Flower Sales, foliage, Global Trade, Growing Vegetables, Luxury Products, Margo, No Doubt, Pussy Willow, Recession, Sunflowers, Uk Customers, Upturn, Wiggly Wigglers, Wildflowers
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