Neil Leeson Nomination!
Friday, November 30th, 2012bbrooks membr Neil Leeson Decor
in Akron, OH, has been nominated for CBC Magazine’s
“Floral Design Company
of the Year”!
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Make Better Arrangements™
Archive for November, 2012Neil Leeson Nomination!Friday, November 30th, 2012bbrooks membr Neil Leeson Decor in Akron, OH, has been nominated for CBC Magazine’s “Floral Design Company of the Year”!
No Place Like Home For the Holidays!Wednesday, November 28th, 2012
bbrooks member Centerpiece Napa Valley in Napa, CA invites all to join them on November 29th for a festive Holiday Workshop! Participants will learn to create three design elements- a wreath or swag, a centerpiece and a unique tree decoration. The registration fee includes all supplies, as well as, expert instrucrion and assistance in crafting. To complement the evening, Venge Vineyards will feature two of their fabulous wines. For more information see Centerpiece Floral & Home Workshops. Wreaths for this Holiday SeasonTuesday, November 20th, 2012Heather Pando of L.A. design studio, Little World Design, use botanicals in a whimsical fashion—a style translated to this wreath. With her team—including Manuel Acosta, who put together this piece—she fashioned “blossoms” out of scallop shells and glued them to a manzanita frame that resembles driftwood. littleworlddesign.com
To get this wreath project kickstarted, Hank Jenkins of SF Bay Area firm, Lushland, simply took a walk. “What’s here is what grabbed my attention in my own garden and on hikes.” Despite the fresh take on materials, he keeps the color palette traditional with green eucalyptus pods and red pincushions (leucospermum).
Zenaida Sengo of Flora Grubb Gardens and Susie Nadler of Cutting Garden in San Francisco, created this colorful holiday wreath of kumquats, dried palm stems, red leucadendron, green citrus leaves.
As seen in December 2012 issue of Sunset magazine.
Sandy Still ResonatesWednesday, November 14th, 2012Cindy Wigglesworth, of the The Huffington Post, travelled to the East Coast despite warnings of an impending Hurricane. She survived. Her appointments were cancelled, her conference postponed. Yet she was glad to be there in Manhattan for the week. Why? Because it was a chance to experience (not just think about) life, and what really matters. To read of her experience please see We Survived Hurricane Sandy. Now What?” as found online. Flower arrangement by bbrrooks member, Elan Flowers, in NYC. Designs for the Holiday SeasonMonday, November 12th, 2012Long time bbrooks member Robin Wood Flowers in Cincinnati is hosting a series of ongoing floral classes, featuring seasonal design, through December. In these hands-on workshops, students will be introduced to each topic with a demonstration by Robin and her design staff, as she shares her signature approach to floral design. Students will leave with their own flower arrangement at the end of the evening. The cost for each participant is $85. Refreshments and light bites will be served. Marina di ChioggiaFriday, November 9th, 2012Easy-care items like sedums, echeverias, crassulas, Scotch & Irish moss, are used to accent unique Marina di Chioggia pumpkins in this lush and textured outdoor table centerpiece. As seen in October issue of Southern Living. Fiddle-leaf FicusMonday, November 5th, 2012These days, a stylish room isn’t complete without the houseplant of the moment. Ficus lyrata (also known as fiddle-leaf ficus or fiddle-headed fig), a midsize tree (they can grow 50 feet high in the wild and can easily top 6 feet in an interior) with large, violin- shaped leaves is enjoying a design moment. Mary Gray, owner of Potted in Los Angeles, traces the popularity of the fiddle-leaf ficus back to the 1950s and ’60s, when the specimens were ubiquitous in office design. Davis Dalbok, owner of Living Green in San Francisco, gets lots of requests for the tree, but he advises buyers to plant with caution. “They need a lot of water and light, ” he says. “If you don’t rotate them, the leaves in the back fall off. They’re kind of finicky plants.” That said, Dalbok thinks the beauty of the fiddle-leaf ficus has proven it’s roots have staying power. As seen in California Home+Design magazine, May/June issue. |
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