
Spring Greens Artificial Flower Arrangement
Viburnum doesn't get the attention that roses and peonies do, but a vase full of it is one of the freshest things you can put in a room.
Here, three shades — bright lime green, softer green and white — are mixed together to create an arrangement that looks like an armful of garden cuttings brought indoors on a May morning. Each stem carries multiple rounded clusters along branching dark wood, with broad, serrated leaves filling in between.
The colour shifts from vivid lime at the top to softer, paler tones lower down, which gives the arrangement depth. From a distance, it looks like a generous green-and-white display. Up close, the individual clusters reveal their detail — tiny petals packed tight into each small snowball head, with subtle variation between the three shades.
At 65cm, it has a full, rounded shape that suits a wide-mouth or bulb-shaped vase. The dark stems and branches look particularly good through tinted or smoky glass.
Living rooms, kitchen islands, dining tables. It brings immediate freshness to a room without needing a single flower in the traditional sense.
Real viburnum blooms for a few weeks in late spring, then it's done for the year. This version keeps that peak moment going through every season.
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Spring Greens Artificial Flower Arrangement
Viburnum doesn't get the attention that roses and peonies do, but a vase full of it is one of the freshest things you can put in a room.
Here, three shades — bright lime green, softer green and white — are mixed together to create an arrangement that looks like an armful of garden cuttings brought indoors on a May morning. Each stem carries multiple rounded clusters along branching dark wood, with broad, serrated leaves filling in between.
The colour shifts from vivid lime at the top to softer, paler tones lower down, which gives the arrangement depth. From a distance, it looks like a generous green-and-white display. Up close, the individual clusters reveal their detail — tiny petals packed tight into each small snowball head, with subtle variation between the three shades.
At 65cm, it has a full, rounded shape that suits a wide-mouth or bulb-shaped vase. The dark stems and branches look particularly good through tinted or smoky glass.
Living rooms, kitchen islands, dining tables. It brings immediate freshness to a room without needing a single flower in the traditional sense.
Real viburnum blooms for a few weeks in late spring, then it's done for the year. This version keeps that peak moment going through every season.
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Description
Viburnum doesn't get the attention that roses and peonies do, but a vase full of it is one of the freshest things you can put in a room.
Here, three shades — bright lime green, softer green and white — are mixed together to create an arrangement that looks like an armful of garden cuttings brought indoors on a May morning. Each stem carries multiple rounded clusters along branching dark wood, with broad, serrated leaves filling in between.
The colour shifts from vivid lime at the top to softer, paler tones lower down, which gives the arrangement depth. From a distance, it looks like a generous green-and-white display. Up close, the individual clusters reveal their detail — tiny petals packed tight into each small snowball head, with subtle variation between the three shades.
At 65cm, it has a full, rounded shape that suits a wide-mouth or bulb-shaped vase. The dark stems and branches look particularly good through tinted or smoky glass.
Living rooms, kitchen islands, dining tables. It brings immediate freshness to a room without needing a single flower in the traditional sense.
Real viburnum blooms for a few weeks in late spring, then it's done for the year. This version keeps that peak moment going through every season.
























