Endless Blooms Cut Flower Mix | Species various
Create perfectly pretty bouquets with this mix.
Harvest attractive bouquets from early summer straight through fall. Here's how to fill your home with flowers: 1.) Choose flowers that have recently opened or are about to open. 2.) Cut the flowers with sharp shears, including long stems. 3.) Snip off any leaves or sideshoots from the stems. 4.) Arrange the zinnias, cosmos, and bishop's flowers in your hand with tall flowers in the middle. 5.) Cut the bouquet to the shortest stem length. 6.) Add the smaller snapdragons.
Contains Dahlia Zinnia, Seashells Cosmos, Bishop's Lace, Northern Lights Linaria, and Snapdragon Mix.
Start indoors 6 weeks before frost. Sow seeds in individual pots, 1-2 per cell. As the sprouts put on their first true leaves, you will be able to distinguish them from each other. Transplant outdoors in full sun or partial shade. Make sure to plant a diversity so that your bouquets will be well-balanced. Grow in single rows to keep taller varieties from shading out lower-growing ones.
Days to Maturity 60-90
Planting Depth ¼"
Spacing in Row 18-24"
Spacing Between Rows 18"
Sun Preference Full Sun
Artwork by Jennifer Knaus. In this oil painting, Jennifer combines portraiture with still life. This combination is the reality of any flower picker. Each bloom plucked, each stem arranged, is a reflection of how we seek and see beauty in our lives.
About Hudson Valley Seed Company
They are a values-driven seed company that practices and celebrates responsible seed production and stewardship. Hudson Valley are best known for their beautiful artist-design seed packs (Art Packs) that appeal to gardeners, gift buyers, and lovers of art and nature.
These Art Packs, most fundamentally, tell stories. Hudson Valley challenges artists to convey in a manner that is fully their own, the history and meaning of the seed variety contained in each pack. These stories were once integral to traditional societies-stories of seeds were often origin stories for entire communities and peoples, and the lore and beliefs that accumulated around seed varieties reflected the nearly familial way in which gardeners and farmers regarded their crops. Our society is, by and large, no longer connected to plants this way. But we like to think these Art Packs help to stitch our fragmented world back together: useful seeds, evocative art, both equally valuable to our experience of being human.