We looked at the calendar to pick out the perfect date for a Holiday open house this month and we pondered long and hard on which weekend would work best for all of our customers (and for us too) Nothing seemed to fit. We wanted a date that wasn't competing with any of the big fundraising auctions for the local charities. Or Thanksgiving and Black Friday shoppers. Or birthday celebrations for the grandkids, (one must have priorites).
So, the only thing we could think to do is celebrate our open house....ALL MONTH LONG!! A holiday extravaganza all month at The Enchanted Florist. Different specials and sales every week. As well as discounts on preordered Christmas bouquets and wreaths all month. That's right. Pre order your Christmas bouquets before November 30th and receive 20% off the regular price. Wreaths, both fresh and silk are 10% off.
And this week only, glorious mercury glass containers are 25% off. It's a holly jolly holiday open house at your favorite little flower shop. Stop and see some of the beautiful, fun pieces we've found for you.
People from a world without flowers must think we would be mad with joy all the time to have such things around us....
Monday, November 15, 2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
In Fine Company!
The results are in for the October Cooler Challenge! I am so Happy!! I finished in 3rd place this month! It is such an honor to be in such fine company. I wanted to post copies of the other bouquets here with full credit given to the submitting shops just because they are so darn cool I needed to share, but I was afraid to do so with out the permission of the other designers or Teleflora. So you'll just have to take my word for it. They were REALLY COOL.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Boy's and Girls Club Dinner and Auction!
The Boys and Girls club of Skagit county is hosting it's annual fundraising Dinner and Auction on Saturday night. It's a festive, fun filled evening of wonderful food and the most incredible, wildly desirable and extraordinary items up for auction that you will ever see gathered together in one room ready for your bidding pleasure. Bring your wallet. You're going to want to bid. Alot.
The Enchanted Florist will be donating to the auction One Dozen Long Stemmed Roses, arranged in vase. Every Month for an Entire Year! This is your chance to donate to a wonderful cause AND make brownie points for 12 entire months. It's a win win situation.
Saturday night at Saint Josephs Center. 6:30pm Tickets are $75 at the door. So go....Eat , Drink, Make Merry and Raise lots and lots of money for this very worth while cause. The kids'll thank you for it.
The Enchanted Florist will be donating to the auction One Dozen Long Stemmed Roses, arranged in vase. Every Month for an Entire Year! This is your chance to donate to a wonderful cause AND make brownie points for 12 entire months. It's a win win situation.
Saturday night at Saint Josephs Center. 6:30pm Tickets are $75 at the door. So go....Eat , Drink, Make Merry and Raise lots and lots of money for this very worth while cause. The kids'll thank you for it.
Labels:
Boys and Girls Club,
charity,
donations,
Enchanted florist,
Roses,
Skagit County
Monday, October 11, 2010
The Wedding that wasn't.
So, sometimes in life things don't work out the way we plan. Sometimes the most elaborate plans fall apart at the last moment. Sometimes, that's a really good thing. You could even say, a blessing.
Last Saturday we were supposed to be delivering the flowers for a wedding in Anacortes. The bride, a lovely woman glowing with excitement, had come in to the shop a couple of months prior to look through our albums and pick out her bouquets. The bouquets she like best, she told me, were the messy-looking, wild bouquets. Full of ferns, grasses, twigs and wildflowers. Hmmm.... messy I can do. As a matter of fact, I believe that messy, wildflower bouquets are what I do best. We hit it off right away.
Fast forward to the Friday before the wedding date. The mother of the bride calls to let me know the wedding has been called off. She doesn't go into details. She doesn't need to, that part isn't any of my business. But what to do about the floral bouquets.
We have a pretty strict policy about when we will accept cancellations, and up until what point the deposit becomes non-refundable. In this case, one week before the wedding, the flowers have already been pre-ordered from half a dozen different suppliers. They are on the way from different parts of the world. Too late to back out now. Mom understood the situation from a business stand point, but really....what do to with all those flowers?
I suggested re purposing them into different bouquets. Just as beautiful, still messy and wild, but more the type of bouquets that the bride could gift to friends or family that had been particularly helpful during this trying time. Mom decided that they could also gift some of the bouquets to friends who had given wedding gifts that were not returnable, another great idea.
I feel so badly for this young woman to have to go through such a difficult time when she had been planning the most special day of her life. But I also know that whatever it was that came up, would have come up eventually. Next month or next year or even a couple of years down the road when there were children involved in the mix. It's so much easier to call off a wedding at the last minute, avoiding all that future heartache, than to wait and wonder if you should have. She's very brave and I wish her all the best for her future happiness.
Below are pictures of some of the bouquets that she gifted to her friends and family.
Last Saturday we were supposed to be delivering the flowers for a wedding in Anacortes. The bride, a lovely woman glowing with excitement, had come in to the shop a couple of months prior to look through our albums and pick out her bouquets. The bouquets she like best, she told me, were the messy-looking, wild bouquets. Full of ferns, grasses, twigs and wildflowers. Hmmm.... messy I can do. As a matter of fact, I believe that messy, wildflower bouquets are what I do best. We hit it off right away.
Fast forward to the Friday before the wedding date. The mother of the bride calls to let me know the wedding has been called off. She doesn't go into details. She doesn't need to, that part isn't any of my business. But what to do about the floral bouquets.
We have a pretty strict policy about when we will accept cancellations, and up until what point the deposit becomes non-refundable. In this case, one week before the wedding, the flowers have already been pre-ordered from half a dozen different suppliers. They are on the way from different parts of the world. Too late to back out now. Mom understood the situation from a business stand point, but really....what do to with all those flowers?
I suggested re purposing them into different bouquets. Just as beautiful, still messy and wild, but more the type of bouquets that the bride could gift to friends or family that had been particularly helpful during this trying time. Mom decided that they could also gift some of the bouquets to friends who had given wedding gifts that were not returnable, another great idea.
I feel so badly for this young woman to have to go through such a difficult time when she had been planning the most special day of her life. But I also know that whatever it was that came up, would have come up eventually. Next month or next year or even a couple of years down the road when there were children involved in the mix. It's so much easier to call off a wedding at the last minute, avoiding all that future heartache, than to wait and wonder if you should have. She's very brave and I wish her all the best for her future happiness.
Below are pictures of some of the bouquets that she gifted to her friends and family.
Labels:
floral,
floral delivery,
garden flowers,
weddings
Thursday, September 23, 2010
From the Garden to the Flower shop
One of my wire services hosts a monthly competition, this month the theme for the Cooler Competition (as it is called) was to pull some type of foliage from outside the flower shop and use it in a bouquet. It could be from anywhere outside. The flower garden down the street, the tree outside the window, where ever. I am very fortunate that I have a plethora of choices when it comes to both foliage and flowers when I walk outside my door.
Everything in the bouquet shown above was plucked, trimmed, yanked or cut from the flower garden in front of the shop, the window boxes on my sidewalk, the field across the street, or the woods next door.
Everything in the bouquet shown above was plucked, trimmed, yanked or cut from the flower garden in front of the shop, the window boxes on my sidewalk, the field across the street, or the woods next door.
It was like a treasure hunt. I found fall blooming crocus in the flower bed, along with heather, the last buddelia of the season, spanish lavender, crocisima pods, and clematis pods. The abandoned field across the street yielded wild sweet peas, oregano (I know, who would have guessed), a few stems of wild grasses and black berries (no surprise there), the flower pots had geraniums and petunias. From the overgrown woods in the lot next door I found what looks like pink yarrow but I know that it is not and some kind of lovely mauve flower that I have no name for. And of course, more black berries. I had to fight the spiders for the blackberries but I won that battle.
Monday, July 19, 2010
And the summer wedding season rolls on....
I'm loving all of these colors together, From the deepest aubergine to the palest lavender and every shade of lilac in between.

The new floral cooler
First we had to tear out the old one and rip up the carpet.
Then Vince, Glen, Josh, and I spent 4th of July weekend hard at work putting together this beautiful new cooler. 

What do you think???

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)