Originality is a must for the Meilleur Ouvrier de France (France's Best Workman), Benoît Saint-Amand. With its new creation, composed with green roses, lichen, or even jasmine flowers, the whole springing from a burnt wood plank. A bold creation !
Stabilized plants also dress your walls ! A 100% natural and 100% sustainable creation. Try this DIY, and in only 45 minutes you will have made a beautiful vegetal frame. EQUIPMENT To make this DIY, you need : - 2 preserved dendrobium - 10 preserved english roses - 3 preserved gerbera - 1 preserved hydrangea - 20 preserved cobra leaves - 4 pinholder - Floral foam - Technic glue and hot glue - A slim frame (H 60cm x L 18cm) 1 / Foam the frame to the dimensions using the 4 pinholder [...]
Edgar Artis is a young Armenian artist. Self-taught in fashion, he uses objects of everyday like flowers and food to dress up his drawings. Discover Edgar's drawings on SecondNatur.
Wood & rose, a creation of Pascal Silvestri to be found on SecondFlor. The mixture of wood and roses gives a natural and authentic look to this composition by florist and floristry trainer Pascal Silvestri.
Preserved flowers are mainly sold as flower heads. And yes, during the stabilisation process, the stem is said goodbye. The reason is technical. For more information, click on this article.
Are you tempted by a floral treat ? Combine some Aqua Marine roses with lime green lichen, some Pacific lichen with light green English roses, some Palo Santo leaves, and your dressage will be perfect. To eat, yes, but only with the eyes ;-) EQUIPMENT To make this DIY, you need : - 2 Aqua marine roses - 3 light green English roses - 5 light blue English roses - 100gr of Pacific lichen - 250gr green lemon lichen - A dozen Palo Santo leaves - 1 dead branch - 1 greaseproof p [...]
We often hear that preserved flowers and plants are expensive products... But expensive in comparison to what? In this article, we decipher this myth for plant professionals.
The opposite of a natural flower is the synthetic flower. A copy is created that is as similar as possible using synthetic materials. Plant stabilisation is primarily a technology for preserving fresh plants. So, natural or not natural? Find out in this article.