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Golden Hour in Provence
The hour when everything turns warm and nothing casts a hard shadow. Apricot peonies in the last light — generous, unhurried, completely at ease.
Golden Hour in Provence is the warmest piece in the collection — a study in a single, sunlit color carried across eighteen stems. Apricot and coral peonies in every stage from bud to full bloom are massed generously in a crisp white cylindrical vessel, their warm tones deepening toward the center of each bloom like something lit from within. There is nothing complicated here — just the pure pleasure of one perfect color, done abundantly. Each flower handcrafted by artisans in Thailand, arranged by hand in Los Angeles.
What's Included
Apricot Peony — Fully Open× 8
Apricot Peony Buds — Partially Open× 4
Green Leaf Stems — Lush Finishing Layer× 6
White Cylindrical Vessel — Included× 1
Create your own golden hour
Monochromatic arrangements are deceptively simple — one color, which means texture and form carry everything. With Golden Hour in Provence, the magic is in the tonal variation within the apricot palette: some blooms lean coral, others are pale cream at the edges. Place deeper tones toward the center and lighter blooms at the outer edges, the way light actually falls on a flower in the late afternoon sun.
"One color, many depths. A monochromatic arrangement rewards the eye that looks slowly."
01
Choose a Clean, Cylindrical Vessel
The white cylindrical vessel included with this arrangement is the perfect foil for the warm apricot tones — its clean geometry makes the lush organic blooms read even more beautifully. If substituting, keep it simple and light.
02
Start with Your Deepest Blooms
Place your most saturated, coral-toned peonies first, clustered slightly off-center. These are your anchors and your darkest point — everything around them will feel lighter and airier by comparison.
03
Build Outward with Lighter Tones
As you work outward from the center, place progressively lighter blooms — pale apricot, then almost-cream at the very edges. This ombre effect within a single color is what gives monochromatic arrangements their depth.
04
Tuck Buds Low & Inward
Partially open buds belong close to the vessel's rim, nestled beneath the open blooms. They add a sense of the arrangement still coming to life — a generous, unhurried abundance rather than a finished, static display.
05
Frame with Green at the Base
Leaf stems placed low around the rim of the vessel frame the blooms and provide the one note of contrast the arrangement needs. Their green against the apricot is the quiet element that makes the whole composition sing.
The hour when everything turns warm and nothing casts a hard shadow. Apricot peonies in the last light — generous, unhurried, completely at ease.
Golden Hour in Provence is the warmest piece in the collection — a study in a single, sunlit color carried across eighteen stems. Apricot and coral peonies in every stage from bud to full bloom are massed generously in a crisp white cylindrical vessel, their warm tones deepening toward the center of each bloom like something lit from within. There is nothing complicated here — just the pure pleasure of one perfect color, done abundantly. Each flower handcrafted by artisans in Thailand, arranged by hand in Los Angeles.
What's Included
Apricot Peony — Fully Open× 8
Apricot Peony Buds — Partially Open× 4
Green Leaf Stems — Lush Finishing Layer× 6
White Cylindrical Vessel — Included× 1
Create your own golden hour
Monochromatic arrangements are deceptively simple — one color, which means texture and form carry everything. With Golden Hour in Provence, the magic is in the tonal variation within the apricot palette: some blooms lean coral, others are pale cream at the edges. Place deeper tones toward the center and lighter blooms at the outer edges, the way light actually falls on a flower in the late afternoon sun.
"One color, many depths. A monochromatic arrangement rewards the eye that looks slowly."
01
Choose a Clean, Cylindrical Vessel
The white cylindrical vessel included with this arrangement is the perfect foil for the warm apricot tones — its clean geometry makes the lush organic blooms read even more beautifully. If substituting, keep it simple and light.
02
Start with Your Deepest Blooms
Place your most saturated, coral-toned peonies first, clustered slightly off-center. These are your anchors and your darkest point — everything around them will feel lighter and airier by comparison.
03
Build Outward with Lighter Tones
As you work outward from the center, place progressively lighter blooms — pale apricot, then almost-cream at the very edges. This ombre effect within a single color is what gives monochromatic arrangements their depth.
04
Tuck Buds Low & Inward
Partially open buds belong close to the vessel's rim, nestled beneath the open blooms. They add a sense of the arrangement still coming to life — a generous, unhurried abundance rather than a finished, static display.
05
Frame with Green at the Base
Leaf stems placed low around the rim of the vessel frame the blooms and provide the one note of contrast the arrangement needs. Their green against the apricot is the quiet element that makes the whole composition sing.