4/26/2010

Wedding Teasers | angela & tony

Ceremony Nestldown, Los Gatos
Reception
Nestldown, Los Gatos
Photography Jay Tsai Photography
Coordinator 8 Events
Caterer Thomas John Events









4/22/2010

Here Comes the Guide!

We've been extended an invitation to become a part of Here Comes The Guide, a book and top online resource for brides planning their weddings. For those of you who don't know, it's a huge honor to be invited to become one of the best professionals in your respective category. It's not as easy as other magazines where you just pay for an ad space. You have to be certified first by The Guide, which means submitting a reference list for certification and then conducting reference checks on your company.

Check out Here Comes The Guide website at http://www.herecomestheguide.com/ and for information on the book at http://www.herecomestheguide.com/book/

3/29/2010

Vote for us!

Annie Siu Floral & Events has been nominated for the 2010 SFGate.com BayList Best contest, competing for BEST Wedding Flowers!
Cast us a vote at:
http://baylist.sfgate.com/annie-siu-floral-and-events/biz/111554
Thank you!

2/25/2010

Another article on the Olympic Flowers!

The Vancouver 2010 Olympic bouquets revealed
Written by
Amanda Ryder
With just one week to go until the Vancouver 2010 Olympics kick off, the official Olympic and Paralympic bouquets have been revealed.

June Strandberg of Just Beginnings in Surrey, B.C. and Margitta Schulz of Margitta’s Flowers in North Vancouver are the two florists who were awarded the contract in 2008 to create the 1,800 bouquets required for the Olympics. The florists were part of the design process and pitched 23 sample bouquets to the Vancouver Olympic Committee (VANOC) panel. The final selection contains flowers that are grown in B.C. and Canada, but cannot be sourced from the natural outdoors in February. The predominately green bouquets contain eye-catching green hypericum berries, delicate green spider mums and broad leaf greens. The foliage consists of leatherleaf fern, loops of monkey grass and aspidistra leaves. A simple royal blue ribbon is hand tied around each bouquet and the handles are also wrapped in recycled paper.

Here's a list of facts about the bouquets:

•The inspiration behind the Vancouver 2010 athlete floral bouquets is to showcase flowers and greenery grown in British Columbia and Canada. The plants chosen can and do grow in B.C. in the summer months but not in the winter. Local greenhouses also could not guarantee a consistent supply of the foliage used in the bouquets in the quantities needed. The bouquet’s green spider mums are produced by Quik’s Farms Ltd. in Chilliwack, B.C. while the remaining product is supplied by farms in Ecuador.

•For the 2010 Winter Games, 1,800 bouquets in total will be made with 1,707 awarded to athletes (1,055 Olympic and 652 Paralympic). All of the flowers and greens will be carefully hand selected and shaped into the bouquets by marginalized women, who may be recovering from addiction, leaving prison, exiting the sex trade, or who have been victims of violence, as well as by other women they train with who are changing careers to become florists.

•This group of 22 women have learned the floral trade through the Just Beginnings Flowers Society, a non-profit social enterprise located in Surrey, BC. The flower shop and floral design school is run by Strandberg and also employs women with physical and mental challenges to prep the flowers for the designers. This experience not only connects the women with the world’s top athletes but provides employment experience in a true and lasting legacy of the Games.

•The bouquets are presented to the top three athletes by members of the international sport federations shortly after they compete in venue. The majority of medallists, who do not receive their medals at their competition venue, will receive a second bouquet at nightly Victory Ceremonies held at Whistler Medals Plaza and BC Place in downtown Vancouver.

•The bouquets are designed to showcase British Columbia and Canada and be taken home by the athletes as a cherished keepsake, or tossed to spectators who are cheering them on as they receive their bouquets and medals.

•The bouquets will be delivered every second day in the first week of the Games, and every day in the second week of the Games, to all the city venues in Vancouver, West Vancouver and Richmond. Bouquets will be delivered every second day to venues in Whistler. All the delivery vehicles are fuel efficient and low-emission models.

•The athlete bouquets are a required element for Victory Ceremonies by the IOC at all Winter Games. At Summer Games, medal-winning athletes receive a bouquet, as well as an olive wreath. Under IOC technical and protocol rules, the bouquets must be 20 centimetres to 30 cm in length and about 25 cm in diameter.

•Organizing Committees are encouraged to design and use plants that represent the region where the Games are being held and that reflect the Look of the Games colour palette.

•Flowers and greenery with little fragrance and pollen count are generally preferred since they lessen the chance of allergic reactions. VANOC wanted to wrap the bouquets in dried cedar but learned some people can have severe reactions to the oil found in the bark so the idea was nixed. Long stems of grey and white pussy willows, known for their furry catkins, that grow wild across the country were also considered but dropped because of safety issues ― when a bouquet is tossed into the crowd it could cause injury if it contains pointy materials. The longevity and durability of the bouquet and the hardiness of the greenery in wintery conditions for an extended period of time were also determining factors in the selection.

•Packaging of the flowers is also minimal for delivery to the venues. Heavy duty cardboard cartons of biodegradable recyclable material are used rather than plastic. The cartons are lined with a biodegradable recyclable material that holds moisture. Each carton holds 10 Vancouver 2010 athlete bouquets individually protected with a biodegradable sleeve.

SurreyLeader.com put together a video interview with Margitta Schulz and June Strandberg. The two florists talk about the process of putting together the bouquets for the Olympics. Check out the story by clicking here.
Article taken from:

2/19/2010

The story behind the Olympic Flowers!


Wed Feb 17, 2010 11:30 am EST
There's quite a story behind the Olympic flowers
By Trey Kerby

After every Olympic event, rather than receiving their medals, athletes are given a bouquet of flowers. At the Beijing Olympics, roses dominated the bouquets. In Turin, it was rhododendrons, azaleas, and camellias. This year, it's green mums and hypericum berries.

The bouquets come from
Just Beginnings Flowers and Margitta's Flowers in Surrey, British Columbia. Their entry was chosen from 58 contending florists. June Strandberg, the bouquet designer and owner of Just Beginnings, teaches floristry to women who have left prison, are recovering from addiction, or have been victims of violence. It's a pretty amazing program, and Strandberg has even taken it behind bars, where she educates convicts. She believes it's her work with these correctional programs that secured the Olympic contract.

For the Vancouver Olympics the florists made 1,800 bouquets, 1,707 of which will be given to medal-winning athletes in the Olympics and Paralympics. The flowers are grown locally, but they aren't in season during February, so additional supplies were flown in from Ecuador.

The flowers were chosen to represent British Columbia and
Canada, and are intended as keepsakes for the athletes. There are even strict regulations for the bouquets presented at the flower ceremonies. Per IOC protocol, bouquets must be 20 to 30 centimeters tall and about 25 centimeters across

Though these flowers might look like something you give your mom at a homecoming football game, a lot of thought and planning goes into choosing and making these bouquets. When you consider the societal benefits behind these flowers, it almost makes the bouquets as valuable as the medals.


For more, click on http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/blog/fourth_place_medal/post/There-s-quite-a-story-behind-the-Olympic-flowers?urn=oly,220230

2/12/2010

Yelp!

We recently received the "People love us on YELP" sticker!










Image borrowed from www.endorsementmarketing.com

12/25/2009

Happy Holidays!


10/21/2009

Testimonial | from the bride

Driving to my studio from the flower market this morning, worrying about this weekend's 2 big weddings, and I get an email from my bride from last last weekend's wedding at the Marines' Memorial Club, San Francisco:

Hi Annie,
I just wanted to thank you for the wonderful job you did on the flowers! They were absolutely gorgeous! Thank you! I don't think I could have envisioned anything more beautiful!
Thanks!


Completely made my day and this will get me going this week!

Pictures to come! (I'm slowly getting them from photographers, but then I have to sift through all of them (sometimes 1000+ pictures) to get the ones of the details. But I promise I will post them here soon!)