
Savannah Spring Artificial Flower Arrangement
Blush pink roses and king protea is a pairing you don't see often, and that's half the appeal. The roses are hand-curved with petals in soft cream-to-pink tones, each one slightly different from the next. The protea heads are bold and sculptural with their layered green petals tipped with touches of pink and red. Put them together and you get something that feels both romantic and grounded at the same time.
Bracken fern gives it height and a wilder, more natural silhouette. Foxtail grass adds wispy, cream seed heads that move with any breeze. Eucalyptus fills out the body with its rounded green leaves and keeps everything connected. There's no filler for the sake of it. Six stem types, each earning its spot.
Available in two sizes, depending on how much impact you want. The larger version fills out a living room or dining table. The smaller suits a bedroom, a side table or a study where you want something with presence that doesn't take over. Either way, it looks best in clear glass, where the stems and the rose thorns are part of the display.
Roses and protea have completely different vase lives when fresh. Here they stay in sync, looking exactly as they should, for as long as you leave them there.
Blush pink roses and king protea is a pairing you don't see often, and that's half the appeal. The roses are hand-curved with petals in soft cream-to-pink tones, each one slightly different from the next. The protea heads are bold and sculptural with their layered green petals tipped with touches of pink and red. Put them together and you get something that feels both romantic and grounded at the same time.
Bracken fern gives it height and a wilder, more natural silhouette. Foxtail grass adds wispy, cream seed heads that move with any breeze. Eucalyptus fills out the body with its rounded green leaves and keeps everything connected. There's no filler for the sake of it. Six stem types, each earning its spot.
Available in two sizes, depending on how much impact you want. The larger version fills out a living room or dining table. The smaller suits a bedroom, a side table or a study where you want something with presence that doesn't take over. Either way, it looks best in clear glass, where the stems and the rose thorns are part of the display.
Roses and protea have completely different vase lives when fresh. Here they stay in sync, looking exactly as they should, for as long as you leave them there.
Description
Blush pink roses and king protea is a pairing you don't see often, and that's half the appeal. The roses are hand-curved with petals in soft cream-to-pink tones, each one slightly different from the next. The protea heads are bold and sculptural with their layered green petals tipped with touches of pink and red. Put them together and you get something that feels both romantic and grounded at the same time.
Bracken fern gives it height and a wilder, more natural silhouette. Foxtail grass adds wispy, cream seed heads that move with any breeze. Eucalyptus fills out the body with its rounded green leaves and keeps everything connected. There's no filler for the sake of it. Six stem types, each earning its spot.
Available in two sizes, depending on how much impact you want. The larger version fills out a living room or dining table. The smaller suits a bedroom, a side table or a study where you want something with presence that doesn't take over. Either way, it looks best in clear glass, where the stems and the rose thorns are part of the display.
Roses and protea have completely different vase lives when fresh. Here they stay in sync, looking exactly as they should, for as long as you leave them there.























