The Post

Gardens have rich pickings

Julia Atkinson-Dunn finds playing around with the display of flowers comes only second to growing them.

- Julia Atkinson-Dunn is a creator and founder of Studio Home. For more informatio­n, see @studiohome­gardening or studiohome.co.nz

Growing up, it was the norm that a little vase of pickings would arrive on our bedside tables when we returned home to stay as adults. The spare room was never ‘‘ready’’ for visitors untilMumha­d popped a bunch of something on the drawers. The kitchen table looked nude without a gang of seasonal happy faces taking up space on their permanent coaster.

As a new gardener, I’ve found homegrown flowers on display to be casual, sentimenta­l and friendly, pulling what is going on outside, indoors and into your daily life.

In my first few years of enthusiast­ic home-based flower arranging, I found building bunches in narrow-necked vessels like old milk bottles a little easier to get going. As I discovered that playing around with my produce is akin to meditation, I have become keener to experiment with size and flower types.

I have found great inspiratio­n from books like A Year in Flowers by the iconic Erin Benzakein of Floret Farm in the United States, A Tree in the House by the fantastica­lly creative Annabelle Hickson. I also find the online floristry course of the United Kingdom’s Willow Crossley better than the Headspace app.

For me, playing around with the display of flowers comes only second to growing them in my garden. It’s creativity for the sake of it, existing in peace behind my own front door and turning a blind eye to standards upheld by those making a living selling their creations.

It’s fun to know the basics and mechanics, but mostly only to then break them as I ammy only client and I choose to be extremely nonjudgmen­tal.

Gappy, stumpy, wonky, unbalanced and battling colour palettes are a byproduct of selecting from a small, seasonal library of flowering plants and the results are always distinctly domestic and homely. Just the way I like it.

Building an arrangemen­t

To encourage you to start arranging your own

flowers indoors, I would recommend these simple tips:

■ Before you start building your arrangemen­t, consider where it will sit in your space. Does it need to be viewed from all angles? Or will it sit with its back against a wall? This willmean you will construct it to have the action looking best where it will be seen.

■ Don’t forget foliage. Use it to firstly map out the vague shape and height that you would like to see for your completed arrangemen­t. Consider an asymmetry outline for a casual look, including some of your shorter stems swooping around the lip of the vase.

■ Aim for your arrangemen­ts to be around 1-2 times the height of your vessel, for a comfortabl­e scale.

■ Backfill with your variety of blooms, staggering heights and scattering to balance, doing your best with the lengths and quantity you can afford from your garden. Don’t seek out perfection.

■ Work with the natural bend and wonkiness of stems, testing which way they want to point in the vase, instead of forcing them into submission. (You will lose.)

■ As an amateur arranger, limited to your garden’s offering on any given day, it’s not always easy to have a showstoppi­ng ‘‘hero’’ bloom, or three, for each posy like you will often see in beautiful, profession­al bunches. Just gather everything you can get your hands on and have a play – the making is the therapeuti­c bit.

■ Alternativ­ely, consider buying a bunch of exciting blooms to add to your homegrown mixed arrangemen­ts. It’s best to seek out New Zealandgro­wn in these cases, rather than out-of-season imports.

■ Arrangemen­ts of a single type of flower en masse looks lush, but a ragtag, mixed arrangemen­t of everything flowering in your plot is equally satisfying and romantic.

■ Always re-cut each stem by 2 centimetre­s, on a 45-degree angle, before threading into your arrangemen­t.

Where to display

I have a particular little wall-hung shelf in my kitchen, inherited from the previous owners, that looks totally nude without a vase of something in it. Up there, it is safe from visiting small hands and my water-obsessed cat and, when empty, prompts me to take five and scoot around the garden with my snips to fill it. It’s become a personal ritual.

A mini vase of delicate, fragrant pickings beside a bed or bathroom sink feels luxurious, despite being so simple. Meanwhile, the cool top of the logburner in summer is a great place for rescued tree prunings, or wind-tortured irises in spring.

Don’t turn a blind eye to flowering herbs and vegetables, weeds and even grasses as little details to sprinkle around the house.

Caring for your picked bunch

There are some fantastic products out there for extending the life of your arrangemen­ts – little sachets of perkiness used by many florists.

Mymumhas mentioned the odd dash of bleach, concoction­s of aspirin or sugar can work wonders too, so it’sworth a google to decide for yourself.

However, formy home bunches, made quickly for our household to enjoy, I simply use fresh water in clean vases, topping up every day and changing out completely when possible every three or so days. If easily accessible, I give all the stems a fresh snip on day three, too. If you have created a big heavy display, sometimes it’s just too tricky to do this, so don’t sweat it.

It’s really common for me to dismantle a fading vase of flowers, discard the dead stems in the compost and retrim the perky ones to include in another vase. Stems of love in the mist, fennel and rudbeckia often migrate from one arrangemen­t to another, multiple times over.

Arranging your own flowers is a simple joy and each change in season brings new fodder and ideas. Be inspired by other home gardeners sharing on social media as much as your neighbour’s windowsill.

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 ?? PHOTOS: JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN ?? A bedside table isn’t complete without a bunch of flowers and you can even experiment with adding seasonal fruit, inset below.
PHOTOS: JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN A bedside table isn’t complete without a bunch of flowers and you can even experiment with adding seasonal fruit, inset below.

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