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Wednesday, January 8, 2020


Here's an arrangement I made out of orange lilies and a larkspur-like blue flower. I love using complementary color schemes. They are simple yet dramatic. 

Monday, July 20, 2009






This is the bouquet I made for the flower show the second time I took the class. The second-years make "Challenge Bouquets." The girls are put in groups of three and each have to make a bouquet that is distinctly different from the other girls' bouquets. The challenge? All three have to use the exact same kinds of flowers. They can vary the amounts, but if one girl uses a flower, they all have to use it. We were also supposed to use some "bling" (to quote my professor)in our bouquets. My bling was a metal dragonfly pendant that I attached to the bouquet handle.

Two of the flowers my group used were pink gladiolus and pink roses. I used those flowers to make a few composite flowers. A composite flower is two or more flowers put together to make one new flower. Each composite flower has two gladiolus flowers and several rose petals.

Monday, March 23, 2009

My Bouquet for the Floral Arts and Event Show



This is my C Bouquet. People emphasizing in floral design take the Wedding Flowers class three times (A, B, and then C). It's this class that puts on the flower show every year. This year, the C girls were supposed to go to DI (a thrift store), buy something that wouldn't normally be in a wedding bouquet, and use it in a bouquet. My DI item was the wooden thing around the handle. I think it used to be a place mat, but other people have said they thought it was a sushi mat. Either way, I think the bouquet turned out very well. I especially like the rooster tail. That was made by taking a ti leaf, cutting the middle vein several times, and tearing it into pairs of strips that look like rooster tails.
This bouquet used one ti leaf, one white hydrangea, several leucadendron, and one place mat or sushi mat. Sadly, I don't remember what the silver-ball flowers are called.

Interpreting Artwork




For this project, everyone was supposed to interpret a piece of artwork, and at the same time, interpret the artist. I chose a painting of Snow White, a watercolor painting by Jill McLeod Miller.

The Torii Gate Project

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Torii Gates are found in several Asian religions, such as Shinto. These gates symbolize entering a sacred place. They can be placed in front of shrines or in a sacred place in nature.