Sustainability Series 03: ‘Enhanced’ dried & Fresh flowers
A new Journal post within Bryonia’s Sustainability Series discussing the topic of ‘enhanced’ flowers, whether that be dyed, bleached, glued, glittered or anything else.
I use ‘enhanced’ in inverted commas to mark the term loosely. I have dug through evidence and fact based research to help provide an insight into what this truly means, the environmental concerns and what alternatives are available to us as consumers and florists. I plan to give a perspective into the impacts of these flowers, should you choose to use them.
Throughout this entry, I don’t want to rewrite evidence that’s already out there, but instead have provided snippets. I’ve linked to where everything been sourced from for your further reading and continued understanding.
This Journal entry is here to help with education, and support in choosing what flowers (or none) might be right for you. To others in the flower industry, this entry is purely to aid conscious consumption, and I do not wish to place disrespect on your choices to either stock, or not stock these products.
At this critical point, whether a supplier or customer, we need to question the environmental impact we’re making, and it's science we need to go to make these choices.
Does being sustainable, and saying no to these flowers, reduce creativity?
I hear this all the time in the industry, that saying no to these blooms then limits the creative power we have as florists…
My stance is very much aligned with that of Becky Feasby of Prairie Girl Flowers, a big spokesperson for the sustainable floristry movement:
“The practice of dyeing and bleaching flowers is destructive. It is environmentally harmful at best and completely negligent at worst. And for what? To achieve colours that you can already find in nature?” - Becky Feasby, 2021
Everything is already out there! Nature is abundant, provides us with so much already, so why would we want to play games with that generosity? Particularly at the detriment of our environment and human health.
And do you know what, more creativity and originality is required when we stick to the natural stuff, working with the seasons. Another inspiring quote is below to help with supporting this perspective:
“I think the beauty of floristry is in the artist’s ability to see Mother Nature’s colours and bring them together in ways that serve the flowers - that make them more beautiful because of their company or the attention brought to the special, imperfect curve of a stem. Those ways that call out the subtle inconsistencies in one bloom’s mauve tones and move the colour through the rest of the arrangement’s flowers are artful.” - Linda D’Arco, 2018
So from here onwards, it’s your decision, but if you do choose to buy ‘enhanced’ flowers (either as a customer or as a florist). Being sustainable is trendy so it’s common to find mixed messages out there, but you should always look to:
Ask questions about the origin of your flowers
Research certification schemes, and what they mean for how flowers were grown & transported (such as environmental, human rights or fair pay etc)
Look to understand the chemical & pesticide treatment of any flowers
Do your growers, wholesalers or florists even know where the flowers are from? And what processes have been undertaken to manipulate them?
Further reading & sources
https://waronwant.org/resources/growing-pains
https://atmos.earth/cut-flowers-environmental-carbon-cost-facts/
https://sustainableflowers.coventry.domains/
https://www.littlefarmhouseflowers.com/blog/2018/12/5/bleached-the-cost-of-altered-floral-materials
https://newrealities.medium.com/no-dried-flowers-are-not-sustainable-products-b9d251d20859
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/nursery-cutflowers/bleaching-plant-foliage
https://sustainableflowerspodcast.libsyn.com/bleached-painted-dyed-glittered-flocd-florals-an-interview-with-becky-feasby-and-linda
https://www.littlefarmhouseflowers.com/blog/2019/11/20/sprayed-the-cost-of-altered-floral-materials-part-2
“Studies on Environment Friendly Dyes Obtained from Waste Flowers” Divya, K. R. & Jelly Louis
https://envhistnow.com/2020/04/30/toxic-beauty-poisonous-colours-in-the-artificial-flower-industry/