wedding flowers

Big and bold wedding urns

 

In celebration of the launch of our latest online class WEDDING URNS we’ve been revisiting some our favourite urn arrangements created in the studio over the years…

 
Wedding urn design | Aesme Studio London

SWEET PEA VINES | Midsummer wedding urns with the freshest, scented garden ingredients - lime beech branches, heavenly perfumed ‘Rambling Rector’ roses, spires of delphinium ‘Misty Lavender’ and cascades tumbling of sweet pea vines.

Wedding urn design | Aesme Studio London

SHAPE & FORM | We loved filling this modern ceramic urn with shapeley September materials for our online class Shape & Form, exploring the use of curves and spires in the Macleaya cordata, texture in the Pennisetum grasses and a mixture of ‘focal’ forms in the hollyhocks and rudbeckia flowers.

Wedding urn design | Aesme Studio London

PAINTED ANGELS | We are very lucky to create flower designs in incredible buildings - dressing these autumnal urns for a special wedding in the parish church of St Mary the Virgin in Huntingfield, Suffolk was a particular highlight and privilege. The exquisitely ornate ceiling was painted over 23 years by the wife of a Victorian rector.

Wedding urn design | Aesme Studio London

TEXTURE | Proof that smaller urns can still pack a punch! This antique vessel on a tall plinth was filled with dried grasses, rusty rudbeckia, dahlias and chrysanthemums for an intimate ceremony in 2020.

 

Would you like to learn how to create beautiful, big and bold wedding urn designs?

Our latest online class is dedicated solely to the design and creation of urn arrangements - from antique pedestals to minimal modern vessels…

June's finest

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Stipa gigantea or ‘golden oats’ has been flowering now for a fortnight or so. The seedheads rise above the other plants, shimmering and swaying. Despite their great height they are still overshadowed by patches of towering Thalictrum ‘Elin’ and Cephalaria gigantea nearby.

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Our first year of growing Eremurus himalaicus the ‘foxtail lily’. After such a relentlessly cold winter and given their shallow planting depth, we were unconvinced we would see these this year, but they have shot up and flowered beautifully.

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The plan for the perennial beds has been to make the most of every bit of space, growing something for each season. Here the alliums and Eremurus rise up out of the clumps of grass and Aster foliage, which will be harvested later in the summer.

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We’ve sadly lost several peonies this year, but the Itoh varieties seem happy and full of life. This lemon yellow ‘Canary Brilliants’ variety has a bright red eye in the centre - we arranged it with buttery Sisyrinchium spires for a photoshoot.