This is the bouquet which we made at my April workshops last week. I ran the same workshop twice - once on Thursday evening and again on Friday morning. We used an exuberant mix of English spring flowers shown off in a
lovely Heron Cross jug. Here is the room set up with the delicate spring flowers – tulips,
bluebells and narcissi (Silver Chimes) in Kilner jars. They looked and smelled
just lovely, and they encapsulated everything that is hopeful about Spring.
And next you can see the alstroemeria, the fantastic solomon’s
seal and the foliage (myrtle and eucalyptus) in buckets waiting to go….and also
3 different colours of hyacinth. Participants could choose their colour of
hyacinth and also choose the colour/pattern of their jug. The final ingredient was
this lovely acid green hellebore from our garden.
We used hand-tying techniques in the workshop. We started
off making a small posy (using tulips, bluebells, hellebore, narcissi and
foliage) so that everyone could practice the technique before we got onto the
main act. Here is an example of a finished posy…..very, very pretty.
Then here are a couple of examples of completed bouquets
– one in a pink jug with a violet hyacinth at the centre, and the other in a blue jug with a blue hyacinth (oh..and there's a celebratory glass of wine as well!).
Then here are some pictures of participants looking very
happy with their finished arrangements. They deserve to look pleased with
themselves as they all managed the hand-tying process really well and took home
some gorgeous bouquets and posies.
I used the flowers left over from the workshops to make
an arrangement in this Chinese vase which I bought in a Sheffield antique
market a year ago. It is a beautiful vase with an exquisite pattern of flowers
and butterflies. I have two the same and am planning to experiment more with
them this year – I think they would look lovely at a spring or summer wedding.
At the beginning of his poem The Waste Land, T S Eliot
wrote:
‘April in the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.’
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.’
This really captures my mood at the moment. I so want the
lilacs, the bleeding hearts, the bluebells, the aquilegia and the roses to all
get going. Everything seems slow and dull this year, but, at last, it is beginning to stir. Here are a few
pictures of the flowers that are growing in our garden now – hellebore,
hyacinths, tulips, euphorbia and, best of all, snakeshead fritillary. We have
just started planting out ammi and snapdragons that we have grown from seed,
and the cosmos and scabious are not far behind….lots to look forward to.
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