Slow Flowers: Four Seasons of Locally Grown Bouquets from the Garden, Meadow and Farm

Awards:   Joint winner of Garden Writers Association Silver Award of Achievement 2014 (United States) Winner of Great American Gardeners Award 2018 (United States)
Author:   Debra Prinzing
Publisher:   St. Lynn's Press
ISBN:  

9780983272687


Pages:   144
Publication Date:   21 March 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Slow Flowers: Four Seasons of Locally Grown Bouquets from the Garden, Meadow and Farm


Awards

  • Joint winner of Garden Writers Association Silver Award of Achievement 2014 (United States)
  • Winner of Great American Gardeners Award 2018 (United States)

Overview

The slow food movement (with its hundreds of thousands of members and supporters) has changed our relationship with the foods in our lives. Now the slow flower movement is changing the way we think about cut flowers: Yes, we'd all prefer fresh, fragrant flowers in our bouquets, not the chemical-laden lifeless blooms flown in from afar - but what to do in those seasons when not much is growing locally? Acclaimed garden writer Debra Prinzing challenged herself to create a beautiful, locally-grown bouquet for each of 52 weeks of one year (going beyond flowers to include ornamental twigs, foliage, greenhouse plants, dried pods, and more), to demonstrate that all four seasons have their own botanical character to be celebrated. She provides extensive design tips, bouquet ""recipes"" and region-by-region floral ingredient lists that can be found in all climate zones through the year. Slow Flowers is written from a DIY floral designer's point of view, to inspire anyone to go green and make a beautiful bouquet with what's at hand, no matter the season. The Garden Writers Association has recognized Slow Flowers with a 2014 Silver Award of Achievement

Full Product Details

Author:   Debra Prinzing
Publisher:   St. Lynn's Press
Imprint:   St. Lynn's Press
Dimensions:   Width: 19.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 18.50cm
Weight:   0.386kg
ISBN:  

9780983272687


ISBN 10:   0983272689
Pages:   144
Publication Date:   21 March 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

From Craig Nakano, LA Times, February 25, 2013: When Debra Prinzing talks about Slow Flowers, the title of her new book, what's most striking is the extent to which concepts that sound so familiar and so logical also can seem so foreign. After all, how many times have we picked up flowers at Trader Joe's without asking ourselves: Are the blooms in season? Were they grown locally? Who produced them or where did they come from? You might find those kinds of sourcing questions answered on menus but rarely on store-bought bouquets. From Debbie Arrington of the Sacramento Bee: The mother of the Slow Flower movement, Prinzing is making a personal crusade to encourage people to think about floral purchases the same way they may approach what they eat: Buy locally grown flowers or grow them yourself. From Ballamy Pailthorp, KPLU-FM (NPR affiliate): . . .an impassionaed advocate for a more sustainable flower industry. Debra Prinzing inspires us to slow down and smell the flowers, especially those grown in our own backyards or by local flower farmers. --Lara Spencer, ABC's Good Morning America lifestyle anchor and New York Times best-selling author of I Brake For Yard Sales. From Craig Nakano, LA Times, February 25, 2013: When Debra Prinzing talks about Slow Flowers, the title of her new book, what's most striking is the extent to which concepts that sound so familiar and so logical also can seem so foreign. After all, how many times have we picked up flowers at Trader Joe's without asking ourselves: Are the blooms in season? Were they grown locally? Who produced them or where did they come from? You might find those kinds of sourcing questions answered on menus but rarely on store-bought bouquets. From Veronica Silva, Canadian Gardening Magazine: In her latest book, Slow Flowers , Debra Prinzing shows us that it is possible all year long to find beautiful ingredients for DIY bouquets in one's own garden or nearby. Her designs prove that we don't have to resort to flowers imported from faraway places... This book will have budding floral designers, snips in hand, running into the garden to gather their next bouquet. From Debbie Arrington of the Sacramento Bee: The mother of the Slow Flower movement, Prinzing is making a personal crusade to encourage people to think about floral purchases the same way they may approach what they eat: Buy locally grown flowers or grow them yourself. From Ballamy Pailthorp, KPLU-FM (NPR affiliate): . ..an impassionaed advocate for a more sustainable flower industry. Debra Prinzing inspires us to slow down and smell the flowers, especially those grown in our own backyards or by local flower farmers. --Lara Spencer, ABC's Good Morning America lifestyle anchor and New York Times best-selling author of I Brake For Yard Sales. Debra Prinzing inspires us to slow down and smell the flowers, especially those grown in our own backyards or by local flower farmers. --Lara Spencer, ABC's Good Morning America lifestyle anchor and New York Times best-selling author of I Brake For Yard Sales.


Debra Prinzing inspires us to slow down and smell the flowers, especially those grown in our own backyards or by local flower farmers.<br>--Lara Spencer, ABC's Good Morning America lifestyle anchor and New York Times best-selling author of I Brake For Yard Sales.<br>


"From Craig Nakano, LA Times, February 25, 2013: """"When Debra Prinzing talks about """"Slow Flowers,"""" the title of her new book, what's most striking is the extent to which concepts that sound so familiar and so logical also can seem so foreign. After all, how many times have we picked up flowers at Trader Joe's without asking ourselves: Are the blooms in season? Were they grown locally? Who produced them or where did they come from? You might find those kinds of sourcing questions answered on menus but rarely on store-bought bouquets."""" From Debbie Arrington of the Sacramento Bee: """"The mother of the Slow Flower movement, Prinzing is making a personal crusade to encourage people to think about floral purchases the same way they may approach what they eat: Buy locally grown flowers or grow them yourself."""" From Ballamy Pailthorp, KPLU-FM (NPR affiliate): """"...an impassionaed advocate for a more sustainable flower industry."""" """"Debra Prinzing inspires us to slow down and smell the flowers, especially those grown in our own backyards or by local flower farmers. --Lara Spencer, ABC's Good Morning America lifestyle anchor and New York Times best-selling author of I Brake For Yard Sales."


From Veronica Silva, Canadian Gardening Magazine: <br> In her latest book, Slow Flowers , Debra Prinzing shows us that it is possible all year long to find beautiful ingredients for DIY bouquets in one's own garden or nearby. Her designs prove that we don't have to resort to flowers imported from faraway places... This book will have budding floral designers, snips in hand, running into the garden to gather their next bouquet.


Author Information

Debra Prinzing is a Seattle and Los Angeles-based outdoor living expert who writes and lectures on gardens and home design. A frequent speaker for botanical garden, horticultural society and flower show audiences, Debra is also a regular radio and television guest. Her previous books include The 50 Mile Bouquet , Stylish Sheds and Elegant Hideaways and The Abundant Garden. Debra is a contributing garden editor for Better Homes & Gardens and contributes to Country Gardens, GRAY magazine, Garden Design, Organic Gardening, Horticulture, Fine Gardening, Landscape Architecture, Sunset, Alaska Airlines and Romantic Homes. She is the founder of slowflowers.com, a free, nationwide online directory to help consumers find florists, studios, wedding planners, supermarket flower departments and flower farmers who grow and source domestic American flowers.

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