DIY Bride
  • Home
  • Real DIY Weddings
  • Projects + Tutorials
  • Vendor Guide
  • Free Downloads
  • Community
  • Contact Us
Home » Bouquets + Flowers » Ranunculus Bouquet
Jun02 10

Ranunculus Bouquet

Posted by Khris in Bouquets + Flowers, DIY Projects & Tutorials

For this bouquet project I wanted something easy, ultra-feminine and delicate. I chose ranunculus because it’s one of my all-time favorite flowers and, sadly, is underused in weddings. It’s my new mission to give it some high profile flowerly love.

The ultra-wonderful team at FiftyFlowers (a DIY Bride advertiser) provided these beauties. I had not yet worked with ranunculus in a project setting so I was a bit unsure what to expect. Ranunculus turns out, are pretty easy to work with. Unlike many white flowers their petals did not bruise easily and they stayed fresh and vibrant for days. (Tip: Be sure to check the care instructions provided by FiftyFlowers before you place your order. It’s helpful to be prepared on delivery day with proper tools and containers.)

If you’ve never worked with flowers before, a simple “all the same flower” bouquet is the best way to go for most.


Step 1: Remove leaves and stray offshoots from each ranunculus stem. Place the stem back in water to keep it hydrated while you work through your bunches.

Step 2: Once you have 40 – 60 stems prepared take 4 flowers in one hand, at an even height, to create the center of your bouquet. Holding the center bunch in one hand, begin adding flowers around the center, one by one. You’ll be creating a dome shape as you go along; each row lower than the next. Depending on how big your flowers are and how big you want your bouquet, it’ll take 3 – 6 rows to get a standard bouquet size.

Step 3: This is the toughest part of the process – place a rubber band around the stems to hold them in place, about 3 inches below the blooms.

Step 4: Wrap it up! I used 1.5″ velvet ribbon to wrap the stems. I tucked one end of the ribbon under the rubber band and wrapped the ribbon around the stems, moving from top to 1″ from the bottom of the estimated length of my bouquet.

Step 5: I then secured the end of the ribbon with a long floral pin and trimmed the ends of the stems to a uniform length.

The final touch was to add DIY Floral Pins (new from FiftyFlowers). They’re much shorter than regular floral pins which makes them super for decorative use. I have a post coming up to show you some ways to use them to make all sorts of pretties.

The flowers in this project were provided by Wedding Flowers - FiftyFlowers Logo


10 Comments

  1. Ashley | June 2, 2010 at 2:13 pm

    Very pretty. I've been dying to try to make my own bouquet, just for fun.

    Reply
  2. Ashley | June 2, 2010 at 2:13 pm

    Very pretty. I've been dying to try to make my own bouquet, just for fun.

    Reply
  3. bridal girl | June 5, 2010 at 7:52 pm

    I tried making my sister-in-laws bouquet for her wedding and I could say that it is not that easy. You will need some time to practice before actually achieving the look of the bouquet.

    Reply
  4. bridal girl | June 5, 2010 at 7:52 pm

    I tried making my sister-in-laws bouquet for her wedding and I could say that it is not that easy. You will need some time to practice before actually achieving the look of the bouquet.

    Reply
  5. Christina | June 5, 2010 at 10:15 pm

    I love this! I wanted to do something similar but in black.

    Reply
  6. Christina | June 5, 2010 at 10:15 pm

    I love this! I wanted to do something similar but in black.

    Reply
  7. Kimmsw | June 11, 2010 at 3:22 pm

    Ranunculus are among my favorite flowers! I'd totally use them in a bouquet; sadly we're not doing flowers for our wedding…That looks so pretty and certainly do-able, though!

    Reply
  8. Taylor Coil | July 2, 2010 at 6:58 pm

    I've never heard of ranunculus before. I have to acdmit that my first impression was that it sounded like something out of Harry Potter…. but wow, those are beautiful flowers. Great tutorial, as well. Thanks, DIY bride!

    Reply
  9. Meredith | July 19, 2010 at 7:54 pm

    I made a DIY bouquet for my bridal portraits, I used pink and white ranunculus, tulips and carnations.

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_FtV9YdtA3ZU/S6pVxHENj…

    Reply
  10. Sara | October 1, 2010 at 5:23 pm

    How much velvet ribbon did you use to do the wrap?

    Reply

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Browse By Category

Our Delightful Ad Partners

 

 

Fifty Flowers DIY Wedding Flowers

Shop Party Favors @ Beau-coup.com





macys.com

Coming Soon

The 3rd DIY Bride book, An Affair To Remember, will release on January 03.

Pre-orders are available at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, or through your favorite indie bookseller.

Archives

Copyright + Trademark

Copyright © 2003 - 2011 DIY Bride. All Rights Reserved. DIY Bride is a registered trademark of Khris Cochran. DIY BRIDE is the registered trademark of Khris Cochran.

So, You’re Married. Now What?

What's next for DIY Bride? We're going domestic! Domestica, our sister site for modern homemakers on a budget, will launch early next year.

Upcoming Events

January 2012: Catch Khris at CHA Winter in Anaheim.

Newsletter

Get free subscriber-only DIY projects, resources, discounts, contests, advice, and other awesomeness in our weekly newsletter.


New subscribers will receive a request to confirm their subscription. Please do not ignore this one otherwise you won't get all of our newsletter-only goodness.

© 2011 DIY Bride