Showing posts with label San Francisco Flower Mart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco Flower Mart. Show all posts

Friday, December 17, 2010

Pacific Coast Evergreen Wreaths and Garlands


IMG_9779 Pacific Evergreen Wreathmakers

My favorite place to buy garlands, wreaths, or fresh greens is Pacific Coast Evergreen at the San Francisco Flower Mart.  When I was there last month, the talented wreath-making team was assembling fresh magnolia-leaf garlands with pink peppercorns and eucalyptus knobs. 

IMG_9778 Pacific Evergreen Wreathmakers

I ordered several six-foot magnolia garlands with pomegranates, incense cedar, and pink peppercorns and then had them shipped to Houston. They make a convenient and dramatic centerpiece for the Thanksgiving table. The magnolia leaves are shiny and green on one side...

IMG_9940 Thanksgiving

... and a velvety brown on the other side. Other six-foot garlands graced the banister of the staircase and the fireplace mantle in another room. The colors will stay true for the entire holiday season.

thanksgiving table

Pacific Coast Evergreen also offers other designs like this wreath with rose-hips, china berries, oak leaves, and eucalyptus leaves...

DSC02628 autumn wreath

...and this one has a magnolia-leaf base with oak leaves, tree pumpkin, green seeded eucalyptus, silvery eucalyptus knobs, and red toyon berries.

IMG_9785 Pacific Evergreen Wreath

The client who ordered these last spring provided all the ingredients for these small wreaths. They used geranium leaves, two types of berzillia berries, and foxtail grass. For a closer look, click here.

DSC05825 greens wreaths

As long as the materials are in season, they can custom-make any size wreaths or garland. To order, contact Al:
Pacific Coast Evergreen
al@pacificcoastevergreen.com
Phone: 415.781.4274

Hours (Pacific Time):

Monday: 300 AM – 1100 AM
Tuesday: 500 AM – 1200 PM
Wednesday: 200 AM – 1100 AM
Thursday: 500 AM – 1200 PM
Friday: 300 AM – 1100 AM
Saturday: Closed (open during peak holiday seasons)
Sunday: Closed

Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Making of a Long-Distance Wedding



DSC06527_0616 Three boxes of California Flowers

We got the big news from Houston, TX in January: he proposed and she said yes. I offered to help with the flowers and she accepted. She wanted something simple; there wouldn't be much time for planning and it was a second wedding for both. Hence the family wedding machine starts up.

We needed a theme or color scheme. I floated some ideas and photos by the bride and groom; Constance at Rochambeau even helped develop one idea. Thank you, Constance! The bride was intrigued with the idea of Ken Marten's floating bouquets and the groom loves tulips. Thank you Ken! The bride selected exquisite linens to match the invitations in black and white with a splash of Tiffany blue.

For the next few weeks, while we were creating and designing our entry for the student competition at Bouquets to Art (stay tuned for that post), Tracy and I came up with some prototypes. Once the designs were agreed upon, the logistics for a long-distance event was to be worked out.

I ordered all the containers from the wonderful staff in the Dallas office of Floral Supply Syndicate. A pallet of vases will arrive in Houston one week prior to the wedding. Craig at Brannan Street Wholesale arranged for me to meet the flowers on Wednesday at the Houston International cargo area.

I was delighted to learn that the flowers were stored in the cargo refrigerator in this cavernous warehouse while I was still in the air.

DSC06526_0615 Houston Continental Cargo

I was amazed that all the flowers, including one thousand white tulips, fit in only three boxes.

DSC06528_0617 Houston Continental Cargo

Though they are rather large boxes that spanned across the width of my rental van.

DSC06529_0618 Three boxes California Flowres

I was over the moon when I learned from Karina at Taylor Wholesale Flowers that they rent out their back room for floral designers. It's a good thing that Karina and I had a friendly chat in Dutch so that I could discover this service. Proprietor Keith Taylor kindly stayed late so that we could roll the flowers into the walk-in refrigerator. The next morning Karina gave me invaluable advice on how to condition the flowers.

DSC06541_0609 Taylor Wholesale Flowers walk-in refrigerator

The greatest gift of the week was Lee Capetillo of Tah Dah Events and Creative Services, who worked his magic with the flowers:

DSC06546_0594 Lee Capatillo at Taylor Wholesale

DSC06547_0595 Tulips

I can not thank him enough for rescuing me from all my foibles. If you ever need any creative services in the Houston area, call Lee - he is a master!

Unbelievably, Keith Taylor made one of his delivery trucks and his driver Abel available to us to deliver all the flowers to the hotel the morning of the event. Keith Taylor is a class act! Working at Taylor Wholesale Flowers was a most pleasant experience and I was extremely impressed with the level of professionalism of the entire staff he assembled and felt embraced by their welcoming arms.

Next post - the big event!

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Macro Monday: Petal by Petal



DSC04666 red roses


Petals

Life is a stream
On which we strew
Petal by petal the flower of our heart;
The end lost in dream,
They float past our view,
We only watch their glad, early start.
Freighted with hope,
Crimsoned with joy,
We scatter the leaves of our opening rose;
Their widening scope,
Their distant employ,
We never shall know. And the stream as it flows
Sweeps them away,
Each one is gone
Ever beyond into infinite ways.
We alone stay
While years hurry on,
The flower fared forth, though its fragrance still stays.


by Amy Lowell (1874-1925)


For more Macro Monday photos, please visit Lisa at the home of Macro Monday .


Sunday, December 27, 2009

Monday, December 21, 2009

Macro Monday - Winter Berries

DSC03194 winterberry detail banner

Wreath detail: Eucalyptus seeds, California bay laurel, privet, chinaberry, tallow berry, pyracantha




Happy holidays to Lisa  and all other Macro Monday participants and thank you for making another Macro Monday possible.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Macro Monday – Protea at San Francisco Flower Mart


DSC02202 Telopia

It was Wednesday, the biggest market day of the week at San Francisco Flower Mart. I went to bed knowing that I would have to get up extra early to pick up my flower order for the Bar Mitzvah Tracy and I were decorating for in a couple of days. I was looking forward to bringing our creative visions to reality with fresh flowers from all over the globe. I woke up at 2:30 a.m., two and a half hours before my alarm was due to chime. I started thinking about my flower order. Did I order enough flowers?  Will I find something special for the bimah arrangement? Will I remember everything? The market opens at 1:00 a.m. Some say that the best flowers are gone between five and six, others say anything unique is gone by four. I’m wide awake now. What the heck, I might as well get up and go to the mart. Let’s find out when the good stuff really goes.

This is what I found:

DSC02203 Telopia

DSC02204 Telopia

Have you ever see a flower so delicious? These proteas were raspberry red and from far away they looked like they were flocked with velvet. Too bad this color is too feminine for a Bar Mitzvah. Many bundles were still available when I left at four thirty but I’m sure they would be gone by six.

When I got home I looked up what variety this wondrous protea was. Only days earlier, Tracy gave me an autographed copy of  Neotropica - Hawaii Tropical Flower + Plant Guide  by the very talented Hitomy Gilliam, AIFD and Lois Hiranaga AIFD. I learned that this protea hybrid is called Telopea (Waratah) speciosissima hybrid “Shady Lady” and that it is only available in limited supply.




This Macro Monday post was inspired by margie at soeurs du jour who was inspired by Lisa.

Happy Macro Monday to you all!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

San Francisco Flower Mart - Part II



Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays are “market days” at the San Francisco Flower Mart. Wholesale hours on market days are from 2 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Yes, you read that right, the market opens at two in the morning! I read somewhere that the top designers in the area consider all the good stuff gone by three a.m. I have never been there when the market opens. My friends and I often threaten to go to San Francisco for a night out and then stay up until the market opens, just to see what this good stuff really is.


I usually go after I send my kids off to school which means I don’t get to the mart until 8:30ish. The earliest I’ve ever been there is 4:30 a.m. and I saw a difference in the product offerings. I saw flowers in unusual colors or new varieties that are in short supply. By 8:30, those specialty flowers are long gone. I can only imagine what is available at 2 a.m.


Wednesdays are the busiest days because that’s when most designers buy their flowers for weekend events. The mart is bustling with buyers from all over Northern California, the fragrance is at its headiest, and the parking lot is hopelessly congested.


It often reminds me of that fabulous flower market scene in “My Fair Lady” (especially minutes 3 through 5):





Non-market days are Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. The flower growers get to sleep in and show up at 5 in the morning. The Flower Mart is open to the public from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. six days a week.


I have my favorite vendors at the Flower Mart; you met some of them yesterday. Brannan Street Wholesale Florist and Torchio Nursery carry a great variety of flowers with consistent high quality. They are pricey, but you get what you pay for.


The day that Treasurehunter joined me, Brannan Street had the sweetest nosegays that flower girls in a wedding party would love to carry:


I asked someone to hold one up for me to show how delicate and sweet these bouquets were.


They also offer beautiful fruits and vegetables. In fact, this is where I bought many of the materials for the della robia arrangement Tracy and I made.




The long-stemmed artichokes I bought from Torchio Nursery:


Vickie (left - top photo), at Florist at Large , is the most personable vendor at the mart. Her sister Valerie collects greens and mushrooms all over the Bay Area. They creates the most lovely still lifes of their findings:


Blossom Valley is my favorite place to buy gerbera daisies and cut orchids:




Shibata’s tropical flowers are beautiful:




Shibata is also a great place to buy floral supplies including ribbons:




Coast Wholesale Florist carries fabulous dry flowers, silk flowers,




sea shells and other novelties to enhance your designs. I know Robin Bird will like these:





It’s a good thing flowers are perishable, because that means that I have to return time and time again.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

San Francisco Flower Mart - Part I


Walt Disney may call Disneyland the happiest place on earth. Not me, I call the San Francisco Flower Mart the happiest place on earth. The Flower Mart is always brimming with possibilities that make me giddy with excitement.


When I went to buy supplies for The Wreath Clinic, my friend Treasurehunter joined me. I sensed immediately that she was in the same state of giddiness as I was. Thank goodness because I heard myself talking with a very rapid, high-pitched voice; perhaps she would understand. "We should make this a field trip for book club!", she said in the same rapid, high-pitched voice. Well then, we're good to go!


Within minutes of arriving, I lost Treasurehunter. I had turned around to set aside some winterberries and “poof”, she was gone. A couple of cell phone calls later I found her with, what else, her treasures:

There is something that “wow”s me every time I go the mart. For example, this stalk of palm dates is what “wow”ed me three weeks ago. It was just casually hanging around Brannan Street Wholesale Florist :



That is one fruit-bearing palm tree! Here are some more dates, with yellow stems, amongst loads of china berries and a couple of bunches of green pomegranates:


I was also “wow”ed by these lady slipper orchids:


I apologize for the Seurat pointillism effect on this photo. I had the camera with the macro lens enabled in one hand and the orchid stem in the other hand – two moving objects, what was I thinking?! But the colors of this flower are so delicious, I just don’t have the discipline to leave this photo on the editing room floor.


These cattleya orchids were other-worldly looking:


Right now it’s wreath-making season at the flower mart. Here are Pacific Coast Evergreen’s wreathmakers:


I could stand and watch them for hours. They make these wreaths at breakneck speeds:



What fascinates me, okay let’s be honest, what infuriates me, is that they don’t even seem to be looking at their work, yet their wreaths always come out gorgeous, balanced, and sturdy.


These wreaths from Brannan Street Wholesale Florist are ready to sell:



Other vendors offer dried wreaths:


This Santa speaks volumes:



That's all for now, but as you probably know by now, I have more to share, so stay tuned for more flower mart photos next time. By the way, the top photo is Torchio Nursery Co.
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