Monday, October 24, 2011

Loss


It is a pleasure to work in a field that allows me to celebrate life’s events with my clients.  Predominately, my work focuses on weddings, but life is a series of events, and it is important to be with my clients through each one.  This includes not only wedding, showers, and births, but also funerals.  Funerals are events that bring families together, however they are solemn affairs; a funeral is an affair when the life is being celebrated, memorialized and mourned all at once.  

When I worked at my father’s flower shop, we would receive many orders for funeral work.  When an order came in, he’d look at the order and say to me, “Dani, people are dying for my work.”  This was my father’s way of lightening up a somber event through humor.  My father taught me with his clever wit not to take life so seriously.

When I receive funeral work, I always take the family into consideration as I am sympathetic to them for their loss.  I design classic casket blankets, funeral sprays and funeral baskets.  I also create custom designs and have accommodated special requests, such as shamrocks, Red Sox’s and Yankee’s logos.  It is always a challenge because I have no form to follow and create each design from scratch using hundreds of flowers.  I go into these particular jobs knowing I never created the design before, but keeping in mind that making the design is going to comfort the family when there is little anyone can do or say to make them feel better.  The family and the decedent are my inspiration.  Funerals can be challenging both creatively and emotionally, but they offer me great satisfaction. 


Friday, September 16, 2011

Love


Today, I read an article about vintage engagement rings.  As I read the article I found myself reminiscing about a wedding that I designed where the bride requested that her parents’ wedding bands be incorporated into her bouquet.  The bride had a vision, to carry a bouquet that symbolized love.  I achieved this by nestling the wedding bands amongst the flowers. This simple gesture demonstrated to the wedding guests the love a couple shared through the years, the love that a daughter has for her parents, and the love that a new bride has for her groom.   The cool crisp air of the day was affirmation that I should share this bouquet with you, the color palette is perfect, as we prepare to welcome fall. 



The bride, a Yale University Student, who came to New Haven to study medicine, clearly inherited her artistic abilities from her mom.  Her mom created each of the beautiful wedding favors, individual cakes topped with handmade sugar flowers.  The bride added her personal touch to the wedding by incorporating family photos; creating wedding invitations and menus; and sharing photos of her and her husband on each table.  She designated tables by months of the year and various stages or the couple’s courtship, rather than simply using table numbers. This bride was such a pleasure to work with and together we executed the day she envisioned, on her budget.