The Spiraled Stem Floral Design incorporates environmentally sustainable flowers, products, materials, and practices into our studio and every project we do. Flowers are often an overlooked element of eco-friendly decor, and now we have made it easy for eco-conscious companies, event planners, individuals, and brides to go green in every color.

Announcing My New Position with Organic Bouquet!

March 10th, 2010

Hi friends! I’ve been a little quiet on the blog lately because there have been some major changes in the works over here and I wanted them all settled before making this announcement – and now its time! I have accepted the position as VP of Business Development with Organic Bouquet! You can read the press release here.

What does this mean for my clients and potential clients? I will continue to offer wedding and floral design services in Southern California as I have for the last six years as The Spiraled Stem Floral Design – however I will now be operating these services as Organic Bouquet. I’m still in the same location, have a great design team, and am available to help make your wedding or event beautiful with the finest eco-friendly floral decor available on the market. You can reach me at all of the same contact information for now, and I will be transitioning the website and blog and such to Organic Bouquet in the near future. I would love to hear from you with any questions you might have or to schedule a consultation for your event! And blogging will resume regularly soon!

Coffee Chat – Guest Amy Stewart

January 20th, 2010

Last week I was invited to take a group from the Southern California Horticultural Society on a tour of the LA Flower District (more on that soon!). The field trip was in conjunction with a book signing and lecture from Amy Stewart, author of the New York Times best-seller Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers.

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I first met Amy almost three years ago, right when her book came out and right when I launched my green program at The Spiraled Stem. I voraciously read her book over the course of about two days, luckily I was flying to the East Coast and had plenty of time to read on the plane. On that trip I met up with Amy at the New York Botanical Gardens, but due to train delays, I missed the good stuff on her lecture and caught her just in time for an autograph!

So last week I finally caught her lecture, and if you have the opportunity you should go too. What struck me the most was that she is a writer  – not a flower industry insider but a flower lover who has an editor who lets her write about her interests and flowers struck her fancy. Must be nice by the way, I was living vicariously through her words and the photos she shared in the lecture – I’d LOVE to go to Ecuador, Holland, Miami and see all of the pieces of this flower machine in motion. SOME DAY! Just putting that out in the universe.

After her lecture I pulled her into the backstage of the auditorium for a Coffee Chat, here it is!

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Christine Saunders from The Spiraled Stem Floral Design chats with New York Times best-selling author Amy Stewart. Her book Flower Confidential: The Good, The Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers. Find out what inspired Amy to peel back the petals of the flower industry, her biggest surprise in her world travels, and why flowers are like wine. Her book can be ordered at www.AmyStewart.com or is available at a bookstore near you.

Here’s the info from the Southern California Horticultural Society series that we were a part of:

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Coffee Chat – Guest Miguel Pola Photographers

January 13th, 2010

Happy New Year! Welcome to 2010 and a whole new lineup of blog series we will be featuring at The Spiraled Stem. Our first series is called Coffee Chat with The Spiraled Stem, where I sit down with one of my colleagues in the wedding biz for a fun Q&A about them and their biz. Subscribe to our RSS feed to catch all of our Coffee Chat guests!

http://www.vimeo.com/8706103

Episode 1 is with Miguel Pola from Miguel Pola Photographers located in La Habra, CA. We sat down at the floral design studio to chat about his approach to wedding photography, w

hat his clients should expect in their consultation and relationship with him through the course of the wedding, how to create timeless photos that will look just as fresh when your grandkids look at them as they did on the day they were taken, and the highlight moment in a wedding that he loves to capture for his clients. You can visit his website at www.MiguelPola.com for more information and to view his portfolio!

Thanks for joining us for our first episode of Coffee Chat, tune in next week for another featured OC wedding vendor!

End of 2009 Message from Christine!

December 17th, 2009

 

Hi friends! Here’s a little happy holidays and year in review message from me. Watch and enjoy, and leave me happy birthday messages, I turn a year older on Christmas Eve!

Please become a fan of Facebook for more photos and fun stuff!

See you in 2010!

I’m Working on Creating a New Website!

October 3rd, 2009

Hello! One of my frustrations with my current website is that I don’t like how the photo galleries work, and what do you – my potential clients – want to see most? Pictures! So I am researching options to have a more photo oriented website, while still bringing you all of the information and resources you like to see on my blog. So… my first trial is with a service that makes videos out of a photo gallery. What do you think? I’d love feedback and if you have a web program that you know of that does a fantastic job of displaying photos, please leave a comment – I’m open to suggestions!

Industry News on Organic Flowers

September 9th, 2009

Hi there! Thought I would share with you an article that popped up on my Google Alerts for VeriFlora about the current state of organic flower farming in “this economy” (I hate that phrase!). Despite the struggles to keep production up in organic farming, VeriFlora certified product is still readily available and still our first choice when sourcing flowers for our clients – like the Jade roses I got today from BellaFlor. We also source many varieties from California farms, one of which is just down the street from my studio in Yorba Linda that grows all kinds of poms, and one of my favorite farms in Carpinteria has fabulous Dahlias (both of which I am using for today’s order for the Anaheim Convention Center!). I will post pictures of today’s project soon!

Reprinted from the California Farm Bureau Federation.

Economic downturn slows organic flower market

Issue Date: September 9, 2009

By Kate Campbell
Assistant Editor

 

From commercial-scale operations to micro-farms, the state’s more than 80 organic cut-flower growers use organic techniques to add value to their products. Some report they have reduced production due to the recession, but say they hope sales will bloom again once the economy recovers.


Kendall Farms office manager Rose Conner, employee Efigenia Avalos and general manager Troy Conner, left to right, check the family operation’s organic flower supply. Growers hope for a sales bounce going into the fall.

Kendall Farms in San Diego County was the nation’s first farm to become certified by VeriFlora—an international certification program that assures sustainability practices in the growing of flowers and nursery stock—and has produced USDA certified organic flowers and greens for more than five years. It’s among a small group of flower growers who can provide a full line of certified organic bouquets in quantities required by retailers such as florists and supermarkets.

But the 350-acre family farm, which specializes in exotic Australian and South African ornamental varieties, produces cut greens and flowers using both conventional and organic techniques.

“With the economic slump, supplying organic product to wholesalers hasn’t been working out, so we’ve been creating our own market,” said Troy Conner, Kendall Farms general manager. “We’ve been trying to work with companies like Whole Foods to expand our sales.

“We’ve had some pretty good success with retailers—both large and small,” he said. “But at the end of the day, consumer demand just isn’t there right now to support the volume we’re capable of supplying.”

So, Conner said, the farm has cut back its organic offerings “significantly” this year.

“People like and want organically grown flowers; they just don’t want to pay for it, at least not right now,” he said.

Abby Harned of Three Sisters Farm in Redlands calls her Riverside County organic operation a “micro-farm” and figures it wouldn’t even form a blip in the national statistics. She and husband Jason are new to farming and sell at local farmers markets, as well as to a few organic restaurants.

“We don’t specialize in cut flowers, but we do grow them and add them to our vegetable offerings,” Harned said, adding that the farm is currently harvesting sunflowers, cosmos, zinnia and coreopsis—what she called “old-fashioned cutting flowers.”

“We want to diversify and that might include edible flowers,” she said. “For example, we have garlic chives that are blooming and we’re selling bouquets of those. You can chop them and put them into salads raw.”

Trends come and go, she said, “but people have been eating things from the garden that have gone to flower forever. I’m excited about offering these things and teaching people that they can eat the flowers too.”

Bagher Bahardar, who grows organic flowers and greens in San Diego County, along with citrus and avocados, said he sells his cut flowers through distributors that include Kendall Farms.

He uses the flower-production capability to help hedge against pest quarantines that regularly pop up and limit his ability to ship fruit out of the area. His cut flower business potentially has a more reliable revenue stream, he said.

For the organic floral market to take off, Bahardar said, there will need to be improvements in the economy and more growers offering greater variety.

Recent floral market studies indicate organic flowers promise farmers good market opportunities, but a larger number of growers are needed to offer the market a wider variety of choices.

Conner said Kendall Farms routinely receives calls from floral wholesalers and designers asking, “What’s new? What’s trendy? What’s hot?” Often the new kinds of floral products are being grown in small quantities or in experimental plots on small flower farms.

And, specialty cut flowers can compete with the traditional flowers—like roses and carnations, which often are shipped from South America, he said. Locally grown flowers can be cut in the morning and in a shopper’s home in the evening.

The Sun Valley Group, one of the largest flower growing operations in the United States, grows flowers year-round on six production farms stretching across California, from the Oregon border to the Oxnard Plain. Because the company has farms in a variety of microclimates, it can produce flowers native to many other parts of the world.

In June 2005, Sun Valley received sustainable certification from VeriFlora. Among its sustainable practices are soil sterilization using steam and the use of more than 15,000 tons of compost a year to improve soil health and fertility.

Mike Crosby, sales manager for the Arcata-based grower, said, “We’ve attempted to grow organic flowers—tulips and grasses—but it’s enormously challenging to grow decorative crops that way. Instead, we’ve adopted sustainable growing practices and think we can do more for the environment using that approach.”

He said that even though the company is international in scope, the recession has taken its toll.

“We’re not immune to the economic problems other businesses are facing,” Crosby said. “We’ve had to downsize to match our cost structure to market demand, but we have a loyal customer base.

“Summer is always a slow time in the flower business,” he said. “We’re hoping for a surge of orders after Labor Day.”

(Kate Campbell is an assistant editor of Ag Alert. She may be contacted at kcampbell@cfbf.com.)

Get Lucky this Friday the 13th – Send Eco-Friendly Valentine’s Flowers!

February 9th, 2009

That’s right, less than a week until Valentine’s Day, are you ready?  

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It falls on a Saturday this year, so send beautiful, earth-friendly VeriFlora-Certified sustainably grown roses to your sweetheart at home or the office on Friday the 13th, and you have all weekend to reap the benefits. It’s the Valentine’s gift that keeps on giving without taking too much from the earth.
 
One-dozen long stem red/pink/white roses arranged in a vase (as pictured): 

$75 plus $12 local delivery and tax

 A half-dozen long stem red/pink/white roses arranged in a vase: 

$50 plus $12 delivery and tax

Non-premium colors are available for a $10 discount. Custom, upgraded, and mixed arrangements are also available, just call and ask for details! We accept cash, checks, paypal, mastercard, Visa, and American Express.

The Spiraled Stem is currently taking orders for deliveries on Friday the 13th in north/central Orange, western Riverside, and southern Los Angeles counties. Call us at 714-632-6885 or email us to place your order today! We are not delivering on Saturday, we will be doing the flowers for a wedding in San Diego that day – congrats Carly and DJ – and Darrell and I will be having a little Valentine’s love of our own.

Get your office buddies together and place three or more orders for delivery to the same location and we will waive the delivery fee for all of you! This way you can take roses home with you Friday night and be a hero without fighting the crowds at the stores and flower shops.
 
Want to send roses to a sweetheart out of this area? Click here to order online through Organic Bouquet. 

Welcome DIY Brides to FlowerDIYvas!

January 14th, 2009

FlowerDIYvas is hosting a FREE Seminar on how to do your own wedding flowers at our Anaheim location on Wednesday, January 28, 2009 from 6:30pm-8:00pm. Visit our website at www.FlowerDIYvas.com to register and for directions.

Please help us out by Taking Our Survey and we will mail you a free copy of Serendipity Magazine!

At the FREE seminar, you will see demonstrations on some of the items you will learn and practice making at the FlowerDIYvas workshops.

Attendees to the FREE Seminar will receive a VERY SPECIAL introductory rate on their Spring 2009 FlowerDIYvas workshop registration.

This is a very limited time offer available to brides who come to the FREE seminar. This price is an excellent deal and won’t last forever – take advantage of our introductory rate and you will be on your way to saving HUNDREDS by doing your own wedding flowers.

email at info@FlowerDIYvas.com or call us at 714-632-6885 for more details or to register!

The Spiraled Stem Launches Two New Product Lines for Our Clients!

January 12th, 2009

2009 is already off to a crazy busy start, and I am dying to share with you what I have been feverishly working on for the last few weeks. Two major announcements: both are designed to help brides who are struggling with their budgets but still want beautiful, quality flowers for their weddings. In addition to our full service and reasonably priced custom wedding flowers where we create your vision together and you leave all of the work to the professionals, we are now offering our brides two additional options:

Announcement One: FlowerDIYvas!

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I have partnered with Dawn Hansen from Lavender Hill to offer FlowerDIYvas, DIY wedding floral design workshops for brides who are considering doing their own flowers. I did my own flowers back in 2003, and even with the experience of 7 years in the floral business and having done several weddings, there were things that I did/didn’t do that made my life a lot more difficult than it had to be during those days surrounding our wedding. I’ll tell you the full story some other time. In the meantime, brides who are thinking about doing their own flowers to save money can learn from our years of experience – we will help you have a gorgeous, polished, and reduced stress wedding for less! Visit www.FlowerDIYvas.com for all of the details and to register!

 

If through the workshop experience a bride realizes that she will be in over her head and that DIY flowers are not for her, she can apply a portion of her workshop fees to full service wedding flowers. Or for brides who know they don’t want to do their own flowers but are still looking for a great low price for their flowers, The Spiraled Stem is now offering a lower priced collection. This leads me to… 

Announcement Two: the e collection!

 

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Wedding flower collections that are easy on the environment and your budget.

I designed the e collection for the bride who is looking for uncomplicated design, a personalized touch, and a great value for her wedding flowers. The bride chooses her color scheme and preferred accent flower, and our designers do the rest – we select the freshest VeriFlora-certified sustainably grown flowers available and create a perfectly coordinated collection for the bride’s special day.

All collections feature VeriFlora-certified roses with the bride’s choice of accent flower and color scheme. Standard accent flowers are spray roses, tulips, freesia or rununculus (as seasonally available); premium accent flowers are mini callas, cymbidium orchids, or dahlias (as seasonally available). Prices are the same for standard vs. premium accent flowers, there are just less of the premium accent flowers in the arrangements.

All collections range between $1900 to $2300 and are based on four attendants for each the bride and groom and ten reception tables (100 guests). Choose from three options for the ceremony setup – a gazebo, an arch, or two pedestal pieces – and three price points for the centerpiece – $30, $40, or $50. Visit the e collection page on our website for all of the details!

 

With both FlowerDIYvas and the e collection, brides with all ranges in budgets will be able to have The Spiraled Stem touch on their wedding flowers. Please help us spread the news by posting about FlowerDIYvas and the e collection on your blog or website, and Contact us today for a consultation!

New Wedding Publications for 2009!

January 5th, 2009

Happy New Year! I hope that your 2009 is off to a fabulous start. There are some exciting things going on here at The Spiraled Stem Floral Design, and I will be sharing them with everyone in the next few days. My new years resolution is to blog more consistently, so lets see how far I can go before falling off the wagon. And I need my readers to keep me accountable, bug me for new blog posts!

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First on the list are new publications… The Spiraled Stem is featured in the premiere issue of Serendipity Magazine, Inspirations for the Asian Bride, and the gorgeous hard-bound, full color book Green Wedding, Planning Your Eco-Friendly Celebration. Lets start with the details on Green Wedding.

Green Wedding, Planning Your Eco-Friendly Celebration, is written my Mireya Navarro, New York Times Style Correspondent. The book is available at all major booksellers (I got mine at Borders for $35) in the wedding section, or you can go to Mia’s website www.mireyanavarro.com to order online and view excerpts. It is a beautiful and classy book on how to have a green wedding without sacrificing style, and has tips on everything from food, flowers, decor, attire, invitations, registry, honeymoons, and living a green lifestyle after the wedding.

I was honored to have been interviewed by Mia for the book last January, a whole year ago, and to have contributed photos to the book as well. They printed 15 images of my flowers! Its also way cool that my name is indexed - that’s right - you’ll find me under S on page 206, just below Sasawashi (a sustainable fabric) and just above Arnold Schwarzenegger, our environmental crusader governor who gets scolded for commuting to Sacramento from LA by private plane. Spiraled Stem Floral Design is indexed too! Mia also included me in the acknowledgments as one of the “several pioneers in the green market” who offered invaluable guidance and “are as much educators as they are business people”. Its a privlege to be in that company!

I was also able to point Mia towards one of my green wedding brides from 2008, Katie Malouf. Her wedding has been featured on the blog here and also in our photo gallery here. Katie is featured in Chapter 6: The Decor, Natives or Jet-Setters? and Mia shares how Katie wanted to use grass for her centerpieces before she knew there were eco-friendly, VeriFlora-certified flowers available through me. Be sure to turn right to Page 94 for the story!

I am working on scheduling a book signing with the author to take place here at the studio in the next couple of months, so stay tuned for that! You can pick up a copy and have her sign it here for you. Books would also be on sale at the signing, but don’t wait until then.

As a bonus, I am offering one free book to the first person to comment on this blog post with the names of the two varieties of VeriFlora Certified roses that were featured in Katie’s wedding.

The next new publication The Spiraled Stem is featured in is the premiere issue of Serendipity Magazine: Inspiration for Asian Brides. In 2008 I had the opportunity to work a lot with Caroline Chang from Serenity Events. She was working on launching a new magazine that catered to an underserved market, the Asian bride. This resulted in a beautiful new glossy magazine that will publish twice a year. Several of our favorite bouquets are featured in the Beautiful Florals article on page 38.

They are not currently available in bookstores, so please email me at christine@thespiraledstem.com with your name and current mailing address, and I will get a copy in the mail to you as a gift from me!

We are honored to have been featured in these fabulous publications, what a great start to 2009!