Step 4:
What is in stock?
Ask what flowers are in season- in high spring daffodils are a fraction of their usual price, as are zinnias in summer.
Be warned: Around Valentine's Day some florists double the price of red roses- seek out alternatives such as baby roses in an elegant planter
Step 5:
Understand less is more.
Understand less is more. One such approach is to employ blooms with big-heads such as hydrangea, sunflowers and dahlias- this means fewer stems and consequently a smaller price.
Know that you can have expensive flowers- just a very small number of them. The rest of your bouquet will be bulked up with much less costly foliage and accessories such as tissue paper, ribbons, raffia, feathers, butterflies and diamante.
This bouquet is made up of a couple of Gran Prix roses, bouvardia, oriental lilies and levcadendron. With a little knowledge, and imagination, you can have a bouquet presented with panache on a shoestring.
Step 6:
Enjoy your success
Knowing how much money is still safely stashed in your wallet, you can bathe in the warm glow of the recipient's delight. |