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Wedding Flowers Blog

Somerset Wedding Florist - Gabs & Chris's Glorious Springtime Wedding

Gabi and Chris's wedding was a wonderfully romantic celebration in the Somerset countryside. It was always gong to be a beautifully detailed event, as Gabi is one half of Sweetpea PR, which she runs with her twin sister Lisa. Together they specialise in public relations for the bridal industry, so when it comes to bridal style these ladies really know their stuff. Five years ago I created the flowers for Lisa's  wedding, and two years ago for one of Gabi's bridesmaids, Amy, so I really did feel at home creating the flowers for this celebratory day.

Fragrant garden style roses, peonies, sweet peas, achillea and brunia in shades of soft pink, blush and grey combined to create the very romantic bouquet that Gabi wanted. Her bridesmaids, who included her twin sister Lisa and friend Amy carried bouquets in perfect ice cream shades of the most luscious peonies roses and sweet peas. 

During the ceremony in the loft of the ancient tithe barn, Gabi and Chris exchanged their vows beneath delicate glass globes filled with soft pink roses.

For the reception downstairs, Gabi had dressed the tables with sequinned runners, gilded and glittered vessels and custom made table numbers, which worked perfectly with her chosen flowers. Tones of soft pink, peach, cream and blush included peonies, stocks, astilbe,sweet peas and achillea.

You can see more of Chris and Gabi's wedding, captured so beautifully by photographer Eddie Judd here in You and Your Wedding. Venue: Almonry Barn, SomersetPhotography: Eddie Judd

You can see more of Chris and Gabi's wedding, captured so beautifully by photographer Eddie Judd here in You and Your Wedding

Venue: Almonry Barn, Somerset

Photography: Eddie Judd

UK Wedding Floristry Advice - The True Cost of Wedding Flowers

Image by Rupa Photography

This is a headline that I’d like to see splashed across the pages of a national newspaper! It is a subject that is very close to my heart, and one I don’t believe is addressed enough in the wedding industry. A lack of truthfulness about what wedding flowers actually cost can and does lead to a huge amount of frustration and misunderstanding for florists and clients alike.

The bridal press, blogs and social media are saturated with images of “luxury” flowers, flower walls and sumptuous hanging installations, which all makes great copy. They hunger for beautiful images of celebrity weddings and flower heavy photoshoots to fill their pages, which is perfectly understandable. A serious lack of information however for the client, about the work involved for a wedding florist to create these amazing displays, is not helped by the media and bridal press constantly telling couples that they can have it all on a budget of £500.

When I first started as a florist 26 years ago there were no social media or blogs to inspire. Brides went to their local florist and chose arrangements from a catalogue of commercially produced styles. The designs and flowers available were very limited, and I would often hear a bride say “I’ll have that one, in peach”. Today everything has changed, and it is rare now for me to meet a bride who hasn’t found her inspiration on social media. Pinterest and Instagram seem to be taking over the world and brides bring THEIR Pinterest boards to ME!

I must admit I have a love, hate relationship with Pinterest! While it can be an incredibly useful tool it can also be very misleading. Much of its imagery features incredibly flower heavy American weddings which have been photographed in Californian vineyards or New England gardens and  this can lead to an enormous amount of confusion and disappointment when I tell couples that the flower heavy look they want will cost thousands rather than hundreds.

Let's face facts, apart from the cost of buying a home, the cost of a wedding is probably the biggest expense at one time that a couple will have in their lives. It is also a fact that American couples tend to spend more on wedding flowers than couples in this country, and photo shoots tend to focus on the lavish rather than the average.

There are many reasons why florists charge what they charge for providing wedding flowers. Firstly, flowers do cost money. We have all become so accustomed to seeing flowers in supermarkets at discount prices that we expect flowers to be cheap. Supermarket flowers are a completely different ball game and bear no resemblance to the industry I work in. Produced in colossal quantities for the mass market, they are sold with the marketing strategy of "pile it high, sell it cheap".

The vast majority of the flowers that wedding and event florists use are imported from Holland, with only 15% being grown in the UK. In Holland flowers are traded in euros, the exchange rate with the pound is against us, and fuel and transportation costs have rocketed in recent years. Inevitably this has seen an increase in wholesale costs, and florists have to pass these costs on to their customers. Unlike Asda, who can sell a bunch of spray carnations for £2.00 (which is what I used to sell them for in the flower shop where I first worked 26 years ago) we can't!

Of course being British, we’re often brought up to believe that it’s bad form to talk about money. Florists can become their own worst enemies when asking a prospective client about their floral budget, and I know from personal experience that there really is no shame asking a direct question. It can save a lot of time and embarrassment later on, believe me.

Any good wedding planner will advise their clients on how much money to allow for each element of their wedding. A rule of thumb for flowers is 10%. of the overall budget, depending on guest numbers, flowers used, the number of arrangements and work involved. For some couples this might seem an exorbitant amount of money to spend on flowers, to others no. It is however a useful figure to bear in mind.

To give you an idea of costings, here is a scenario for a

Central London venue for the ceremony and reception with a total of 80 guests using seasonal flowers and low table arrangements.

Bridal Bouquet – hand tied bouquet £85.00

Bridesmaids x 3 – hand tied bouquets at £40.00 each – £120.00

Buttonholes x 6 at £6.50 each – £39.00

Corsages x 2 at £15.00 each – £30.00

Ceremony Flowers – 2 large vase arrangements – £150.00 each – £300.00

Registrar’s Table – 1 small arrangement – £60.00

Reception Flowers – 8 tables at £80.00 each – £640.00

Cake Flowers – £50.00

Total -£1324.00
VAT -£264.80

Delivery, installation and clearance £150.00

Grand Total – £1,738.80

Bear in mind that certain flowers of course are always more expensive, more elaborate designs are more labour intensive and additional costs such as hire items, transport, petrol and staff wages, and the dreaded VAT have to be factored in, and can increase the final cost dramatically. 

I spend many months preparing for a wedding, sometimes more than a year. The run up to a wedding can involve months of site visits, design meetings, quotes, re quotes, adjustments and mock ups of final designs. A wedding day for me can have a 4 a.m. start to prepare the bridal flowers, and a 1 a.m. clearance because the venue insists on everything being taken away at the end of the night. All this work has to be included into the final fee.

To the uninitiated many people think that my work finishes when I deliver the bridal bouquet. If truth be told many people think that mine isn’t a proper job at all. Over the past 26 years I’ve come to realise that the people who do think that don’t respect my work, attach no value to it and therefore think they have the right to negotiate my prices down. I have also come to realise that I have the right to say no. 

Like everyone else, florists are in business to make money; so why should we feel embarrassed about charging what we charge? We work to earn a decent living, pay our bills and provide employment for the myriad of people involved in keeping our industry going. 

Every year I take on a limited number of weddings. I don’t work every weekend because enquiries, like buses tend to come along all at once. I often have to turn down work because I’m already booked, and when I’m not I don’t get anything! Such is the nature of the business.

Choosing the flowers for a wedding should be one of the most enjoyable parts of the planning process. Professional florists are highly experienced, skilled and creative individuals who deserve respect for what they do. We work incredibly hard (often behind the scenes) to make a couple’s day look amazing, and what we do is reflected as the true cost of wedding flowers.

 

 

Gloucestershire Wedding Florist - Lisa & David's Barnsley House Wedding 12th December 2015

Winter weddings have a certain magic about them. Maybe it's because the days are so much shorter, or the weather so unpredictable, or because there's a general feeling of festiveness in the air. Whatever the reason, Lisa and Davids' wedding at Barnsley House in Gloucestershire definitely had that something special about it.

If Barnsley wasn't a stunning boutique hotel you'd want to live there, so it's easy to see why Lisa and David chose it for their reception. Following a candlelit ceremony in Barnsley church, guests walked through the starkly beautiful garden to a marquee filled with candlelight, flowers and hanging foliage chandeliers.

The floral design for the wedding drew its inspiration from the beautiful suite of stationery that Lisa and David had chosen, featuring blowsy overblown roses. Lisa's naturalistic bouquet combined Memory Lane and Amnesia roses, ranunculus, astrantia, scabious pods, viburnum berries and silver grey brunia.

For the wedding ceremony, posies of pure white hydrangeas with long trails of ivy lined the aisle of Barnsley church. The reception was held in a marquee behind Barnsley House, where long banquet tables were dressed with flowers in mismatched vessels and mercury glass candlesticks, while overhead floated a pair of foliage chandeliers filled with larch branches, trailing ivy and asparagus fern, standing out boldly against the backdrop of the marquee.  

Sam Gibson captured the look and feel of the wedding perfectly. This is what I mean about that certain magical quality of a Winter wedding. You'd never know that the weather was terrible and blowing a gale, but it all came together for a wonderful celebration

.

The most perfect Christmas tree and the most perfect venue. Beautiful Barnsley House.

 

Venue: Barnsley House

Photogrpahy: Sam Gibson 

London Wedding Florist - Matt & Hugh's Vibrant Autumn Wedding

Matt and Hugh-0361.jpg

As a wedding supplier it is always a privilege to be part of a couples special day. Coming a month before my own wedding, Matt and Hughs' wonderfully vibrant celebration was an absolute joy to be involved with, and a floral feast for the senses. 

Matt and Hughs' excitement and enthusiasm about their wedding flowers was evident from my first meeting with them. They chose Dartmouth House (which is one of my favourites) for their ceremony and reception venue, and together we created a design scheme based on an amazing colour palette of blue, red and orange.  They also chose Jamie Bott as their photographer who captured so many stunning details of this beautiful day.  

Dartmouth House has an amazing staircase, which just cries out to be decorated with flowers! To greet guests as they made their way up to the ceremony I filled a large classical urn with vibrant late summer flowers. Among my floral friends it has become something of a standing joke  that I cannot make small urn arrangements.....it's true, I can't! 

To create a focal point for then ceremony in the Churchill Room, I dressed the mantel with a vibrant garden style arrangement of Devon hydrangeas, English dahlias, Chinese lanterns, and late summer foliages. To complement this, a cute little pair of matching urns with the same flowers dressed the registrar's table.

For the reception in the Long Drawing Room, my suggestion to Matt and Hugh was to have a mix of high and low arrangements for the tables to create interest across the  room. Luscious flower heavy designs of hydrangeas, dahlias, roses, spray roses, sedum and asclepius topped tall champagne flute vases and filled low glass comport dishes. 

One question I get asked time after time is "how do you pin a buttonhole onto a jacket"? I think it's easiest if you pin it BEFORE you put your jacket on. If you do it this way you can be sure of securing it properly, and positioning it perfectly. I like to use a couple of pins for added security!