May 4, 2001, Newsletter Issue #35: April Showers Bring May Flowers

Tip of the Week

Unless you`re an avid gardener, you probably don`t know the names of all the flowers used in wedding bouquets, corsages and arrangements. Latin names, common names, genuses and hybrids----it can be a confusing world if you haven`t been exposed to it before. Even if they aren`t familiar with floral terms, most brides have some idea of what kind of flowers they would like for their wedding. The key to getting what you want is doing a little research beforehand.

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In Shane Connolly`s Wedding Flowers, author Shane Connolly presents nearly two dozen interpretations of classic, romantic, and alternative themes for wedding flowers, with more than a hundred beautiful color photos and dozens of stylish ideas for bouquets, baskets, headdresses, and table arrangements. This book recognizes the need for a fresh approach to wedding flowers, whether your wedding is in a church or on the beach. Some of the ideas included in the book are the classic elegance of a bouquet of white cyclamens and trailing eucalyptus; the romance of winter captured in an opulent floral muff; and the contemporary chic of a single perfect camellia

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