Dried flowers - they're back!

Dried flowers - they're back!

Currently, dried flowers are celebrating their great return. Thanks to the craze for vintage, boho and the 70's, they have become a very sought-after floral trend.
They need no care, may last for decades and are sustainable. Dried flowers are currently booming, not least in florists' stores.

In the 1980s they were still smiled at as a housewife hobby, but today they have cult status: dried flowers. From the East Village to Singapore, they are in demand - and not only among florists.

Fashionistas and artists also consciously stage them, and they can even be seen at weddings. Dried petals are just as easy to throw as confetti, and above all they are more romantic.
Today almost everything from nature is dried. Not only flowers, but also grasses, grains and leaves. In the past, romantics used to press violets or forget-me-nots between pages of a book and as a result they got faded, flat flowers.

Today, drying is professional and dried flowers are used more often. Professionally committed people, because they have little time and still want a beautiful ambience; those committed to sustainability, because they do not understand why flowers should be disposed of after a short time; and those who want something «different» more often, because dried flowers are «in» at the moment.
If you think about it, dried flowers fit in well with our times. There are many young, well-off people who prefer to stock up on second-hand goods rather than buy fast fashion.

Why shouldn't they use a dry bouquet? At best, one can ask oneself why one didn't think of it earlier.

Discover dried flowers now

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