Wednesday, October 17, 2007

leaf Stretching our Floral Dollar with Wheatgrass

Previously: Our Favors Require a Degree in Botany

If I had all of the money in the world I would have sprinkled our reception venue with dozens and dozens of dense, exotic flower arrangements. But as someone interested in having a wedding without going into debt we had to think of something else that would have a similar impact, but with less cost. There is a quality to fresh flowers, the glow of living, breathing things, that I love. So, in lieu of silk flowers we decided to go with live plants, namely wheatgrass. I've been growing the stuff for years and I love how each plant breathes and perspires, furthermore, the bright green fit right into our color scheme.

Plus, the our third try at finding the right variety of wheatgrass did the trick! It grew up thick and the blades were new-leaf green. I wanted to give the impression of a lawn so I added random yellow chrysanthemums to some of the containers. We used our little containers of wheatgrass to add a little to our table settings and as companions to our guest table centerpieces.
It might not be clear from this photo, but I sank small plastic test tubes into the soil of the beflowered grass containers to serve as mini water tanks. We filled the tubes with water using a turkey baster before inserting the flowers. They still looked fresh almost two days later when they were deployed for the wedding.


These larger containers were used to decorate our peripheral tables, like the cake table and the guest book table.


I'll have more pictures of our grass and flowers in action when our photos are released.

Labels: , ,

posted by Alison 10/17/2007 09:43:00 PM : (0) comments : splink

Archive


Powered by Blogger


prime-number.com/Blog

Friendly Message:
This website was made with no preservatives or animal products. Not tested on animals.

3 Second Bio:
The author is currently a registered alien living in Nagoya, Japan. The author is teaching and studying computer science in Washington, DC. Alison is working on her Ph.D. at the Language Technologies Institiute at Carnegie Mellon University. She is working on a Machine Translation System for minority languages (those spoken by fewer than 2 Million People).



Elsewhere:
Bio
Graphics Homework
Wallpaper
GW Anime
Nice People
GWU
Archive
Email Me

Flash Failures:
Old Flash Page
Aquarium
KiteBuilder
Shapes

I belong to:
Photographica
Virtual Tourist

People I: Know/Sort of Know/Don't Know:
» Carolina
» Instapundit
» Laura
» Carolina
» Aaron
» Mister Pants

Old Versions:
Early to Rise
Chopstick
Equine
Bubble
Fly Trap

Old Splash Pages:
»Original Recipe
»Sketch of Clark
»Big Blob
»Another Big Blob
»Digi Charat Bear
»Linoleum Samples




Google



Search WWW
Search www.prime-number.com



Current Weather in Pittsburgh, PA: The WeatherPixie