Showing posts with label Dried Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dried Flowers. Show all posts

Friday, January 29, 2021

Winter Favorites For The Winter Garden and Botanicals Blog Hop


Hi, Friends, 
Welcome to a wonderful winter blog hop hosted by Amber of Follow The Yellow Brick Home
Amber has such adorable vintage decor in her gorgeous home. This hop features the winter garden and botanicals. Amber shares my love for gardening and collecting so this hop will not disappoint.  


If you are coming from My Thrift Store Addiction, welcome. Cecilia always creates the cutest displays with her collections. 


If you have been following for a while, you might know that I love to garden. My gardening creativity kicked into high gear last spring, summer, and fall. We had many successes which only fueled the need for more plants and flowers. We're even growing some winter vegetables in our empty summer containers. It won't be enough to feed the two of us but it is fun, none the less. Our bulbs have already started to come up here in North Texas. It won't be long before the succession of late winter/early spring flowers begins. Our new acreage out in the country has almost weekly surprises as its secrets are revealed with the warming of the soil. Winter is a bit of a break from the labor of gardening but it is still beautiful, brimming with the promise of spring.


It isn't too early to begin planning for and thinking about my 2021 gardens. While I wait somewhat impatiently for that last frost date, our home is sprinkled with dried remnants of last season's garden, appropriate faux seasonal flowers and precious artifacts with a rose motif for a touch of Valentine's Day romance. 


A rose painting is one of my favorite pieces of art. It was painted by my grandmother or great grandmother. Dried roses rest in a white iron stone dish. This display sets the theme for the big cupboard in our front hall. 
A book of poetry that belonged to my father is graced with gorgeous vintage graphics. 


The bird was tucked in the back of a booth at an antique mall in Fort Worth. I adore this sweet little bird. My parents and my step mother all attended Valparaiso University in Indiana. I found the souvenir vase around the corner from my house here in Texas. I had to have it. The color is stunning. The connection is meaningful. 


A coordinating glass trinket box echos the floral motif. The glass is cracked on the top but I don't care. The enamel flowers are charming in their faded hues.  


Our garden has pansies as the primary winter annual and I adore pansies. I have a vivid memory of weeding with my grandmother in Wisconsin. She had pansies scattered around near her asparagus. I recall the tidbit of information that it takes two years to cultivate asparagus. I have never tried because two years seems a long time to wait. It isn't lost on me that by now, I'd have plenty of it to harvest. 


Snipped pansies tucked into tiny vessels tide me over until spring. A few darling pansy dishes echo what is going on in the yard.

Real flowers and pots from the grocery store or nursery typically are brought into the house during winter providing beauty and cheer on a gloomy day.  This year we are staying closer to home so these adorable plants are but a memory. 


A collection of early faux spring flowers sparks the temptation to take a trip out to the yard to check on bulbs peeking up through the ground. 


Winter is a great time to reflect on the season that is past in order to plan for the upcoming garden. 
What plants were a success? What were failures? What new plants became favorites? 
Resting from the physical aspect of the garden creates time to list some gardening goals and improvements. 


Some of my seeds have already been ordered but the surge in back yard gardening has caused some seed shortages and shipping delays. I'm excited because I have a couple of new varieties on the way soon. Empty seed packets used as decor during the winter bring whimsy and a visual reminder that spring and those seeds are on the way. Saved seeds from last year's plants carefully rest in a drawer in the garden room.


It's about time to start seedlings indoors. I'm not presently set up for that but I'd like to make it a gardening objective. I think it would give some things time to get fully acclimated before our intense summer heat arrives. We have a long growing season but flower growth is impeded by the temperatures in July and August. Floral themed art is a must around here but it doesn't always reflect the realities of gardening in Texas.


One of my 2020 goals was to enjoy cutting and drying flowers from the garden so that their enjoyment lasted beyond the season. Seeing them during this season, brings satisfaction that the garden last year was a success and the gardens this year hold such promise.  




I love winter. The botanical artifacts dotted about the house charm and remind me that a new season awaits. The earth appears to lie to dormant but in reality it is bursting with energy in order to welcome the spring. 
What a spring it will be. I cannot wait to get planting out in East Texas! 
Thanks for stopping by. 
Follow me on Instagram for more up the minute updates. 
Please, head back around to visit Amber if you haven't already. Follow all the links listed below to see what the rest of my friends are up to. 
Blessings, 
Katie 


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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Cozy And Collected Fall Vignettes

Hi, Friends, 
How are you? I hope this finds you well and encouraged. 


If you have been following, you may remember that I spent a lot of lockdown in the garden. 
I wanted an abundance of flowers for cutting and drying. I've been purposeful and methodical about creating beauty around us during these turbulent times. Since it's crazy out there, I want our home and my blog to be a respite from the storm. 
In that vein, growing flowers, drying stems, and collecting seeds has been a tranquil habit this past spring and summer. Collected naturals has played a big part in our 2020 fall vignettes. 


Pumpkins in alternative mediums and materials have also found their way into the displays. 


Dried roses and hydrangeas surround a new needlepoint pumpkin from sm Wollman Designs  
Vintage needlepoint is one of my fun collections. This piece is gorgeous with bright flowers on a black ground. 
A cute houndstooth acorn sits near by. 

A dough bowl filled with velvet jewel toned pumpkins and acorns rests on the French commode. 
It took several years of thrifting to collect these gorgeous velvets. One acorn and one pumpkin came from Tom Thumb several years ago but the rest are all hand made. 



Copper tones in the kitchen echo the rich burnished hues of autumn. 


No pumpkin needed in these fall displays. 



Toasty brown accents dot our space this season.  


The needlepoint pillow with a brown ground is one of my favorite needlepoints. 
The yellow and brown throw was thrifted. I pick up vintage throws every time I see them even if it is 105° outside. 

The wild grapevine in the Woodland Realm was clipped back in June. It is persistent stuff but was clipped again and again until there was enough to craft some pumpkins. 
It took about three weeks to get enough to wind up them up slinky style. 
These are so fun and remind me of my time in the woods this summer. 



The scarecrow looks handcrafted but he was made in a factory somewhere. 
More dried florals and a white faux pumpkin. 


A Dollar Tree pumpkin was decoupaged with a napkin from Michel Design Works. 
 


The holiday cupboard in the garden room has some collected majolica. The brown floral pitcher was a recent eBay purchase. The aqua platter was a garage sale find for just a few dollars. 
The pumpkin is older Hobby Lobby. 



The squirrel planter was thrifted and is a favorite to pull out for the season. The picture frame with the printed vintage botanical repeats the rusty color. 


The brass bird cage was a $1.00 at a thrift store. It is a favorite too. I feel sorry for the birds that got such a small cage. A vintage Boy Scout mug from Bill's dad sits inside. It isn't majolica but it has the same feel. The yellow and green leaf plate was thrifted. It was only $1.99. 


A green vegetable bowl from Portugal is filled with another leaf plate, shards of broken pottery from a trash pile, and vintage flower frogs. It's such a weird collection of little items but I like it. It all rests on a stunning old gardening book. 


A Hobby Lobby red truck got a new green paint job. I love the orange and white pumpkin. 


I adore my new to me candelabra on the mantel.  



The golden brass is perfect for this time of year. 


The leaves below were found on a morning walk in August. 
They look flash dried if that is even possible.  
They are so pretty with the purchased lavender and the dried grocery store roses. 


That is about all for now. I appreciate each and every one of you. 
Thanks so much for having a look at our warm and cozy fall decor. 

Katie 

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Ordering Dried Flowers

How do you prepare for fall?


Two years ago I ordered some dried flowers on eBay. 
I might not be able to grow hydrangeas but that wouldn't stop me from decorating with some during the fall and winter.



I found a seller in Oregon that had a great deal on them.





Last fall I wanted Bittersweet.



I'd seen gorgeous images of orange and yellow Bittersweet in fall arrangements.



It doesn't grow in our area but I found a seller in Ohio. 
A box of fresh Bittersweet arrived about a week later.


When I opened the box, it just looked wrong. 


 The berries were yellow, not yellow and orange.



I closed up the box and decided to deal with it later.


Later arrived and the berries were open. 
They were the yellow and orange colors I'd expected but the vines had dried all curled up in the box. They were a little hard to manipulate into displays but I enjoyed the heck out of those cuttings.
 The yellow and orange is just so cute for fall.



 Supposedly Bittersweet can be used from year to year but to me the berries dried out too much.


The seller for this batch laid them flat for shipping. 
It will be a few more weeks before these will be used in some fall displays. 



In the meantime I've stocked up on Baby's breath in a variety of colors. I love it in vases at this time of year. 
Work has been pretty crazy lately. I'm glad the summer was so productive because projects around here are definitely on the back burner. 
I hope you had a great week. 
Katie 
Linking with,
Metamorphosis Monday 
A Stroll Thru Life 
Coastal Charm   
Cedar Hill Farmhouse 
Savvy Southern Style