Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (2024)

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (1)

Wondering How to make Small Flower Arrangements?

I’m the kind of girl that likes to have flowers in every room. I have a small apartment and to have one large arrangement would overwhelm my space. Instead, I like to buy a few bunches of flowers and then make my own small flower arrangements to scatter all over the place. Today, I made small flower arrangements for the kitchen, bathroom, and bedside table.

Here is what I purchased to make all 3 small flower arrangements:

6 garden roses (similar: roses, carnation, peony or anything with a medium sized bloom) These are your feature flowers.
10 stems tulips (similar: lisianthus, ranunculus, anenome, spray carnation or anything with a small bloom) These are your secondary feature flowers.
2 stems viburnum/6 flower heads total (similar: hydrangea, spider mum or anything with a large bloom) These are your bulk flowers.
5 stems solidago (similar: wax flower, baby’s breath, astrantia, aster or any fill flower) These are your fill flowers.
5 stems waxflower (similar: same as above) These are your fill flowers.
5 stems eucalyptus (similar: seeded eucalypus, fern, anything with a loose form) These are your loose greens.
10 stems myrtle (similar: boxwood, ruscus, anything with a stiff form) These are your stiff greens.

Clean Your Flowers

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (2)

Cleaning your flowers is first thing and an important step. This means getting your flowers prepared to use. With flowers, like roses for example, remove the majority of the leaves. It feels wasteful to remove the green from all your flowers but you don’t want leaves in the water because they will breed bacteria. Removing them will ensure your arrangement lives longer. See THIS POST from last year on how I clean tulips – it is the same manner for all flowers. The photo above shows greens after they have been cleaned. I have broken the greens into smaller segments instead of using one full branch. Since we are only making small flower arrangements, you will not need the full branch, rather just the ‘twigs’.

Small Flower Arrangements in the Kitchen

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (3)

I like the most showy arrangement to be in my kitchen or common area. I used a glass with a 3 inch opening and a pedestal base. Since I was going for a loose feel with this arrangement I made a grid on the top of the vase using floral tape that is 1/4″ thick and made 1-2″ squares. The grid helps your flowers stay in place. I use this grid method when making a loose arrangement. You will see below the different method I use for a tight arrangement.

This arrangement used: 3 viburnum heads, 2 roses, 3 tulips, fill and greens as needed.

To make the arrangement I give each flower a fresh cut and then place my flowers in the vase starting with the largest first down to the smallest. Add in greens between each flower.

The order in which I placed the flowers was: viburnum, greens, roses, greens, tulips, greens, fill flowers, greens.

I allowed the greens to be a bit wild and fall outwards away from the arrangement and the flowers were a bit more concentrated in the centre. This bouquet is done…on to the next!

**If you substitute your viburnum for something else you will not need 3, the viburnum I got were smaller. Substitutes could be 1 large white hydrangea or 2 mini green hydrangea in place of the viburnum.

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (4)

Small Flower Arrangements for the Bathroom

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (5)Shop this adorable wallpaper

Bathrooms are usually a smaller space so something small and sweet is all that is needed. The vase I used here has only a 1″ opening – very tiny!

This bouquet used: 1 rose, 1 tulip, and greens and fill as needed.

Small Flower Arrangements for the Bedroom

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (6)
Shop this gilded monogram Anthropologie glass/vase

I like to keep bedside table arrangements low and in a well balanced vase. I can’t even count how many times I have spilled my glass of water when reaching for my cell phone in the morning – a sturdy glass is key! This bouquet is more compact than the kitchen arrangement so I made it in my hand like a traditional hand tied bouquet. THIS POST provides instructions on how to do this style of arrangement. I secure the arrangement with tape or an elastic around the stems when I am done and give the stems a cut all at once so they are completely even. Similar to the first arrangement, add the flowers from largest to smallest adding greens in between each step.

This bouquet used: 3 viburnum heads, 3 roses, 5 tulips, and greens and fill as needed

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (7)

Follow Threads & Blooms on Instagram for Daily Updates!

2K Shares

Related

Small Flower Arrangements and How to Make Them! Threads & Blooms (2024)

FAQs

What is the 3:5-8 rule in floristry? ›

The 3 5 8 rule in floristry refers to the concept of using three types of flowers, five stems of greenery, and eight stems of filler flowers in a floral arrangement. This rule provides a balanced structure to the arrangement by ensuring a harmonious combination of different floral elements.

How do you make a flowing flower arrangement? ›

Cut the flowers very close to the knape of the bloom, leaving only a centimeter or less of stem. Then place them in the water to make sure they float and water doesn't just fill the petal cup and sink the bloom. There are many ways to start your floating arrangement, such as by color, shape, or size.

What are small flower arrangements called? ›

A small bouquet - perhaps you are thinking of a ''posy'' or a ''nose gay''. These are the old fashioned terms for a small bunch of flowers which have been arranged and tied so they can be held almost like an accessory.

What is the golden rule in floral design? ›

Employ The Golden Ratio

According to Bruni, the "golden ratio" for floral arranging is creating a visual where the arrangement is two-and-a-half sizes bigger than its container.

How many flowers in a small arrangement? ›

Bouquet and Arrangement Stem Counts
ArrangementStem Count for Small ArrangementStem Count for Medium Arrangement
Rose Bouquet8-12 stems18-20 stems
Baby's Breath (Gypsophilia) Bouquet1/4 bunch1/2 bunch
4 x 4 x 4" Square Vase Centerpiece10 stems15-20 stems
Mason Jar Centerpiece6-8 stems10-15 stems
3 more rows
May 23, 2023

How do you make flower strings? ›

Basically, you trim your flowers of choice into springy little stems, then double knot each stem onto a piece of twine that measures two to five feet in length. After adding flowers to six or so pieces of twine, tie each piece of twine to a branch.

How do you hang flowers on string? ›

If the flowers you chose don't have a center tube, CAREFULLY use scissors to push a hole through the middle of each flower head before stringing them together. Begin to string the flower heads onto the twine, leaving a little bit of space between each bloom. Use dabs of glue to hold the flowers in place on the string.

How to tie string for a bouquet? ›

Grasp the string around your little finger and then loop it round the bunch above your holding hand at least once. Pull tightly, place the bunch on a surface and tie in a double knot. Trim the stems gradually to fit your container, testing as you go - you can always cut shorter.

What is a petite flower arrangement? ›

Floral designs less than 8 inches tall.

What is a tiny bouquet called? ›

Small handheld floral bouquets called nosegays, posies or tussie-mussies date back to medieval times, when women carried these fragrant bouquets as a way to help mask the stench of the streets.

What are the six types of centerpieces? ›

Blog
  • THE 6 MOST POPULAR TYPES OF WEDDING CENTERPIECES.
  • Green Garlands.
  • Candles.
  • Trees.
  • Vase.
  • Chandeliers.
  • Antiques.

Which principle of floral design uses the ratio 3 5 8? ›

One of the European designs that we create in floristry is called the Form Linear, in which we apply flowers by using the 3:5:8 rule, with 3 main focal groups: 3 = Sub-dominate Group/Placement. 5 = Contrasting Group/Placement. 8 = Dominate Group/Placement.

What is the rule of 3 floral flowers? ›

In the context of styling with faux flowers, this rule can be applied to enhance the aesthetic impact of your arrangements. By grouping flowers in sets of three—whether it's three separate flowers, three distinct colors, or three varying heights—you achieve a harmonious and dynamic display that is pleasing to the eye.

What is the golden ratio of flower pattern? ›

Oddly Phi appears as each petal is placed at 0.618034 per turn (out of a 360° circle) which is allowing for the best possible exposure to sunlight. The golden ratio is found in all sorts of nature including shells, flowers, trees, faces, hurricanes, animals, and even spiral galaxies!

What is the basic rule of floral arrangement? ›

Flowers should be one and a half to two times the height of their vase. For example, for a 12-inch flower vase, your flowers should be 18 to 24 inches tall. For bowl-shape and small cube containers, keep flowers at about one and half times the height to the vase.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Terence Hammes MD

Last Updated:

Views: 6014

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (49 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Terence Hammes MD

Birthday: 1992-04-11

Address: Suite 408 9446 Mercy Mews, West Roxie, CT 04904

Phone: +50312511349175

Job: Product Consulting Liaison

Hobby: Jogging, Motor sports, Nordic skating, Jigsaw puzzles, Bird watching, Nordic skating, Sculpting

Introduction: My name is Terence Hammes MD, I am a inexpensive, energetic, jolly, faithful, cheerful, proud, rich person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.