Two Ways To Preserve Flowers

I don’t keep flowers in my home nearly as much as I should. That cheerful burst of color on a table or at your bedside is the perfect way to brighten up a rainy day or bring a bit of summer inside once the weather turns cool. Mostly, I hold off on purchasing the gorgeous bouquets that tempt me from farmer’s market stalls and grocery store floral departments because I always wish I could keep them alive for just a little while longer. It’s such a shame when a bouquet withers and browns, unless of course, you know how to preserve those gorgeous blooms.

Dried flowers can be a beautiful addition to your home, especially this time of year. In slightly more muted tones than their fresh counterparts, preserved flowers add texture to your decor and can be used in a number of ways. Today I’m sharing two ways to dry your bouquets, so you’re able to enjoy them long into the grey winter months.

Dried Flowers

Air Drying

The more natural of the two methods I’m sharing today, air drying works best for hearty flowers such as roses, lavender, and some wildflower varieties. Flowers with delicate petals, like daisies and sunflowers, and mature flowers won’t hold up as well and will likely lose their petals in the process.

Dried Flowers

To air dry a bouquet, select the flowers that will hold up best with this method and display or press the remainder. Remove any excess foliage and any dead petals, and trim the stems to a length no shorter than 6″-inches.

Dried Flowers

Dried Flowers

Tie the stems together with twine and hang loosely in a dark, well-ventilated area for two to three weeks until dry.

Dried Flowers

Dried Flowers

Dried Flowers

Silica Drying

The bad news: silica gel isn’t exactly natural. The good news: you can reuse these little beads indefinitely, which means you don’t throw them away. Available at most craft supply stores in the flower aisle, silica gel is the same thing that comes in those little packets in shoe boxes and works by absorbing the moisture content in flowers. The process can take a couple of weeks or a couple of minutes depending on the method you choose to use.

Dried Flowers

To use the silica beads, carefully follow the directions on the back of the container: pour 1/2″ of silica beads into a microwave-safe bowl that you don’t plan to use for food (ever again), add the flowers, and gently pour over more beads to cover. You can either leave the bowl as-is for two weeks, or place it in a microwave for 2 minutes. If you choose to use the microwave, allow to cool completely before removing the flowers and wash your hands after handling.

Dried Flowers

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Sara
9 years ago

These are great tips! I always resist buying flowers from farmers markets as well because I know they’re just going to die in a week or so… Having dried flowers around the house is so perfect for the transition to fall though!

xoxo Sara
http://www.restlessnomads.com

9 years ago

Very intrigued by the silica gel. Although it isn’t natural, the idea of using it out of shoe boxes is great because then those things don’t get thrown in a landfill. Definitely fulfilling the reuse part of “reduce reuse recycle”

http://juliettelaura.blogspot.com

9 years ago

Ah this is great! I’m always hesitant about buying flowers because they seem to die after 1-2 weeks. It’s definitely not the business especially when you spend $50 on em haha. I will have to try this next time I get flowers for the girlfriend :) Thanks for the tips!

9 years ago

Silica beads! Such an awesome idea. I’m giving these tips a try and see how the flowers will last! Thank you for sharing :)

Erika
9 years ago

Thanks for this post!!! I’ve been drying flowers for years and find the hanging method to work really well! I’m going to try the silica beads method next! After my flowers are totally dry, I spritz them with hair spray. This keeps them lasting much longer. I’ve also sprayed them with spray glue and sprinkled glitter on them, it makes them look so gorgeous!

9 years ago

I dried (by accident) a bunch of hydrangeas and they dried beautifully! Thank you for your guide ;) pinning!

Very informative post about the dry flowers. Such a great idea to use Silica beads. But from my side it is better to use artificial flowers for interior decoration. But this is only my opinion…Flowers are also alive.