Flower Selection for Arrangements

A structured program for anyone learning to choose flowers with purpose, not guesswork.

Choosing flowers for an arrangement involves far more than colour preference. Each lecture covers a specific aspect of the selection process — from seasonal availability and stem conditioning to how different species hold their shape over time. The program addresses the decisions that most beginners get wrong and explains the reasoning behind each one, so choices become deliberate rather than accidental.

Close-up of fresh cut flowers arranged on a workbench, showing varied textures and forms

Program structure

What the lectures cover

The sequence is intentional. Each module builds on the previous one, so by the time you reach more complex pairing decisions, the foundational logic is already in place. Expect concrete comparisons, specific flower names, and honest notes on what tends to go wrong at each stage.

Reading a flower before you buy it

Purchasing the wrong flowers for an arrangement often happens before a single stem is cut. This module focuses on what to look for at the point of selection — bud stage, leaf condition, stem firmness — and why the same species can perform very differently depending on where and when it was harvested. Working through 6 common species in detail, the lectures compare what a well-conditioned stem looks like versus one that will close within a day.

  • Bud stage identification across rose, ranunculus, and lisianthus
  • Stem firmness tests that take under 30 seconds
  • Spotting cold-chain breaks at wholesale and retail
  • Reading foliage as a freshness indicator

Seasonal logic

Seasonal availability affects price, quality, and longevity. This module maps the Ukrainian growing calendar to practical sourcing decisions.

  • Peak-season species by month
  • When imported stems are worth the cost
  • Substitutions that hold the same visual weight

Structure and filler balance

Every arrangement needs structural stems, filler material, and accent flowers in a specific ratio. Getting that ratio wrong is the most common cause of arrangements that look crowded or flat.

  • Structural vs. filler roles
  • Proportion by stem count
  • Avoiding visual noise

Colour decisions that hold

Colour pairing in arrangements is less about aesthetics and more about how colours age together. Flowers that look balanced on day one can clash on day three as petals shift.

  • How petal pigment changes over time
  • Neutral anchors for complex palettes
  • Safe combinations for mixed-longevity species

Format

Video lectures with accompanying reference sheets for each module

Pace

Self-directed — each lecture averages 18 minutes, revisit any time

Level

Suited to beginners and those who want to revisit the basics with more rigour

Access

Available to registered learners via melvadu.com from any device