Create a Luscious Bridal Bouquet

July 27, 2010 in
Etsy.com handmade and vintage goods

Photo by Craftzine

Brookelynn Morris
brookelynn

Brookelynn Morris is a staff writer for Craftzine and author of Feltique, a book that features an array of felt-related projects. Brooklyn's projects have been featured in CRAFT and her work is a staple at Maker Faire.

My lovely friend Leandra was willing to let me create anything I wanted for her bridal bouquet this weekend. Her only requirement was that I used “all the colors in the rainbow.” So I went to the San Francisco Flower Mart, and picked out everything that called to me. The morning of her wedding, I set to work, and 5 minutes before she walked down the aisle, I handed off the most amazing, luscious bridal flowers I have ever created.

Making a bouquet for the bride is a very rewarding, but intense task. The pressure is astounding — not only are you trying to give the her the perfect accessory, you’re working with very fragile and perishable materials. The hard part is not going overboard with things, and keeping the bouquet as tasteful as possible. My original concept used hydrangea and green mums, but I had a moment where Tim Gunn from Project Runway came into my head and asked me to “Use my editing eye!” I left out those flowers because, when I really thought about it, they made the bride’s bouquet look more like a birthday party arrangement. The final piece was the perfect complement to her beautiful, dreamy, colorful bridal style.

Materials:
Flowers
Large clippers
Floral scissors
28 gauge floral wire
Wire cutters
Floral tape
Rubber bands
3-4 yards of lace and ribbon
Decorative straight pins

Step 1:

Prepare your flowers by removing all the leaves along the length of the stems. With the roses, I use the floral scissors to cut the leaves, but with the tulips, the leaves wrap all the way around the stem, so I gently pull the leaves downward with my fingers.

Step 2:

Use thin floral wire to incorporate short stemmed flowers with longer stemmed flowers. For this bouquet, I cut the cymbidium orchids from their long stem, and then individually wired the blossoms to the sturdy stem of a peony. Cut 1ft of floral wire, and then pierce the stem of the orchid about 1/4″ from the head of the flower. Carefully push the wire through the stem so that the blossom is centered on the wire. Twist the wire around the orchid stem to support it, and then twist the ends to the peony. The result is one long peony, with an orchid floating alongside. Don’t worry that the wire looks ugly, it will be well concealed in the final bouquet.

Step 3:

Once all the flowers are prepped, they can be gathered into groups. Work the flowers in small bundles, then gather those together for the final piece. Start by placing individual stems into your hand, and seeing how they look together. Keep your fingers loose — a tight grasp might break stems. Mix and match the flowers until you find the right combination. Once you have a bundle that you like, rubber band it together, and set it into water. Create two more groupings that are similar, but not symmetrical.

Step 4:

When all three bundles are built, remove their rubber bands and combine them together. Trim all the stems to a length that compliments the height of your bride, and then secure the entire piece with one rubber band at the top, and one at the base.

Step 5:

My bride’s handle is first wrapped with satin ribbon that has been in the bouquets of other brides in her family. It’s a sweet tradition that they carry on — each new bride gets to use the same piece of ribbon. To create the handle, just wrap the stems.

Start at the top, and push a straight pin through the ribbon and into the stems. Work down the handle wrapping the stems tightly, but not too tightly! Secure the ribbon at the bottom of the bouquet with a second pin. After I wrapped with the ribbon, I went over the handle again with a wide piece of pale blue lace, wrapping until I used nearly three yards of lace.

Step 6:

Pin the lace to the stems using crystal pins. I worked in a line down the inside of the bouquet. Push them firmly into a strong stem, and as you get towards the bottom, angle the pins up as you place them so that they will not poke out the bottom. Mist the flowers with some fresh cool water, and then try not to swoon when you see the bride’s face light up at the sight of her stunning flowers!

Thank you to Brookelynn Morris and the good folks at Craftzine for sharing this project with us. For more projects and ideas, check out their site.