Showing posts with label Pieter Landman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pieter Landman. Show all posts

Sep 23, 2014

Pieter Landman Video Series

"Use a picture, it's worth a thousand words."
                    -Newspaper editor Arthur Brisbane in 1911. This is the first recorded use of this adage.

Anyone who knows flowers, knows Pieter Landman. His designs inspire and delight audiences across the globe, and his style is refreshingly clean and simple.

When Pieter handles flowers you see a master at work, it's obvious Pieter has been working with tulips since before he could walk. There are even rumors that he was actually discovered as an infant curled up in the tulip fields on Holland.

We were lucky enough to have Pieter do a series of videos with our flowers. Learn from an expert, these 5 clips are full of tips, tricks and ultimately gorgeous flower design ...and don't forget we have a great selection of fall tulips, iris and lilies ready to work with after you get inspired!

Tulips, Telstar Iris and Greens:





Tulip Bouquet with Greens:




Parrot Tulips with Bear Grass:




A Posy Bouquet




Tulips, Asiatic Lilies and Telstar Iris:




Have we piqued your interest about Pieter? Read our interview with him from last year.

Enjoy, and be sure to Share!


Nov 5, 2013

Rosehip Run Down




Rosehip November, autumn I'll remember

Gold landing at our door, catch one leaf and

fortune will surround you evermore
                                  -Vashti Bunyan



Rosehips are a specialty branch that Sun Valley brings to market every fall.  How do we manage to get this impressive harvest?

lilies, tulips, cotinus and rosehip bouquet by Pieter Landman
Shocking OT Hybrid lilies, fall tulips, cotinus and rosehips, with our Willow Creek farm in the background.
Believe it or not but it starts in the middle of winter. One of the coldest jobs on the farm is to cut back the rosehips every January. A team heads out to our Willow creek farm and prunes the rose bushes all the way to the ground. They grow back really strong through spring and start to bloom in summer. Imagine a field of roses all giving off an amazing scent, this is the upside for the same crew with freezing hands and toes in January. The blooms need to be pollinated to create the hip, so we have local bee keepers bring in hives.  As I was out there last August, it was kind of scary since there aren’t just a few bees…there are thousands, and they are drunk on nectar and making enough honey to make any Pooh Bear drool.

Bee Hives at Sun Valley Floral Farm
Bee's are brought in to pollinate the rosehips.
Once the flowers are pollinated, the bloom falls off and the seed pod (a.k.a. the hip) will form. Scientifically this is the swollen ovary of the rose plant, ready for reproduction.  We maintain a steady supply of water to the field, and as the dry, chilly days of autumn come to Willow Creek the leaves naturally brown and fall off. This exposes our big, red rosehips. The roses are bred to provide the best hips, so this is why your roses at home don’t create hips like we offer.

Where rosehips come from
Our roses develop into rosehips thanks to a few happy bees.
Since this crop is grown outside rather than in a greenhouse, we can’t control the harvest as much as other crops, like tulips.  When the rosehips come in, it’s all hands on deck to get them harvested and ready to sell. Right now our crew is picking big numbers of rosehip stems, and they are selling at about the same rate. (Hint! Hint!)

#AmericanGrown Rosehips
CA Grown rosehips, ready to ship.
One reason this product is big for Sun Valley is that due to agricultural restrictions, rosehips can’t be imported into the United States.  You will often hear the benefits of buying American Grown flowers, however, in this case you don’t have a choice!  Sun Valley is the major producer, so check in on current availability.

By about mid-December, we must be done picking as the weather turns for the worst. A few weeks later in January, the process starts again.

growing rosehips for floral design
Rosehips in August, still developing.
At home or in the design studio, make sure to keep the rosehips in water. They are still drinking water and will start to look a little like raisins if they don’t stay hydrated.

Rosehip Holiday Table Setting
A beautiful autumn table arrangement, featuring rosehips, Sumatra lilies, red tulips, brassica, and a variety of Christmas Greens...all available from Sun Valley Floral Farm.
Design wise, rose hips are extremely versatile and fit the holiday color palette perfectly. Thanks to Pieter Landman who designed the two above arrangements.

To get deeper into the history of rosehips check out this post: What is Hip? 

Sun Valley Floral Farms Blog

Aug 20, 2013

Cotinus Among Us!




“Gardens and flowers have a way of bringing people together, drawing them from their homes.”
- Clare Ansberry, The Women of Troy Hill: The Back-Fence Virtues of Faith and Friendship

Feel that subtle nip in the evening air? Like it or not, fall is just around the corner. Luckily autumn is perhaps the best season to get creative in floral design. The fall design palette is all about contrast and texture, Sun Valley is known for our lilies, iris and tulips, but we have an eccentric, funky and arty side of our offerings as well.

Cotinus grown for flower arrangements
This cotinus reaches 10 feet tall!
Did you know we have a wild variety of branches, pods, berries and greens? These non-conventional design elements add an eccentric touch to any arrangement, which will leave even experienced floral pros asking, “What is that?”

Growing Cotinus
Sunlight brings out the rich burgundy of the cotinus.
Cotinus is one of these hip, modish crops.  It is a dark branch, offering leaves which are maroon on the top and dark greenish on the bottom.  There are highlights of purple, burgundy and scarlet running through the leaves giving this subdued design element some serious visual interest.
Cotinus grown by The Sun Valley Floral Farm

Cotinus’ common name is “smoke bush” or “smoke tree,” which is derived from the wispy clusters of flowers that appear as puffs of smoke around the plant.  We harvest before the plant flowers, so don’t expect any puffs of smoke from us.  Cotinus grows at our farm in Willow Creek, California; this farm is up in the hills of Humboldt County right on the banks of the Trinity River.  This is an ideal spot to grow this crop, since it loves the sun.  It grows in tall rows, and really stretches to the sky.  These branches will shoot up to 10 feet tall in a single season.

Gardeners have used cotinus extensively for years; it is a great boarder and can even act as a living fence in your garden.  The tree has been bred to grow in different shape and sizes; however the tall, straight "Royal Purple" variety we grow is my favorite.

Cotinus flower arrangement
A gorgeous arrangement (and photo) by Lynn Staine of Fiori By Lynne featuring cotinus, check out her website and blog.

Cotinus Bouquet
An autumn arrangement featuring Sun Valley Fall Tulips and our cotinus, by Pieter Landman.

In the design studio cotinus is very versatile, it can act as a dark back ground element, or stand out as a tall, eye catching focal.  To this end, Sun Valley offers custom cuts, how many other floral products can you get a 6 foot custom cut?  This probably the only one.

Have a look at our Cotinus Resource Page, and why not order few boxes of this unique foliage?

Sun Valley Floral Farm's Blog

Jun 18, 2013

How To Get 700 Tulips Into a Mini.

Take a cherry red convertible Mini and fill it with about 700 tulips. Which shines brighter: the dramatic tulips or the awesome vehicle?

mini cooper side view
Mini with tulips

Last year Sun Valley Floral Farm needed a “stop you in your tracks” display for the International Floriculture Exposition in Miami Beach.  Our Dutch designer Pieter Landman had a bold vision.  When he presented his vision of tulips bursting out of a convertible Mini during a creative sales meeting, everyone was kind of silent…waiting for the boss to react. We watched in anticipation as he mulled it over with his thick Dutch accent, 

“Ahhh, Hmmm, tulips?  In a car, ja?” 
 
Pieter Landman, a very flamboyant designer whose resume includes the flowers at Wimbledon, royal palaces and international fashion shows, throws is hands in the air,

“Not just a car! It’s a Mini, it’s perfect.  The color, the shape, we fill the whole thing with tulips, more colors than a rainbow, no one has seen this before!”

The boss says, “Ya, a Mini Cooper, aye?”

The head of sales, a California born surfer and flower industry pro quietly chimes in, “That'd be awwwwesome.”

The rest of the sales team is already making eye contact establishing the pecking order for who gets to drive first.  A sly smile starts to creep across the boss's face, as we watch him mentally warm up to the idea.
“Hmmm, Ahhhh, OK Pieter, let’s do it!”

Floral Designer Pieter Landman
Pieter Landman in action.
The unintentional cheers and high-fives from the sales team make for a quick uncomfortable silence as people suddenly feel self-conscious as they are knuckle bumping in the middle of the meeting.  The boss looks around as his staff tries to regain their composure, “Meeting adjourned, now get back to work” as he strides out of the office while trying to keep his own grin contained.

A month later, the head of marketing is now tasked with renting a Mini in South Florida.  She calls to make a reservation from California, and getting a little bit of sticker shock from just the cost to rentthe Mini, says, “Well, we aren’t really going to drive it any further than the convention hall, we are just using it as a display.” 
 
“What are you going to display,” asks the rental agent.

“Well, we are a flower farm and we are going to fill it with flowers” she replies.

“Flowers?   …in the Mini?  Mama, I don’t think we have a car for you to rent. Goodbye.” (Click)
Ever determined, she makes the rounds of all the luxury car dealerships and finally finds another red convertible Mini, of course for Pieter, It has to be red!  I overhear her explaining in her sweet southern accent that she is on vacation, just going to use the car to zip around town, no mention of work, conventions or tulips.
mini cooper dashboard with tulips
Mini dashboard with tulips

We land in Miami about midnight, and have asked the rental people to stay late so we can pick up the Mini, we have also rented a nondescript van for all our stuff.  As we leave the safety of the airport and start off into a dark industrial portion of Miami, far off the beaten path to locate the Mini rental place, I notice Jack locks all the van doors and is checking his mirrors a little too much.  We pull into a street that reminds me of a Miami Vice set, our intrepid Marketing Director hops out of the van with Anthony.  They walk into the open sliding door of a big garage.  A menacing looking guy (who was probably just upset he had to sit there until nearly 1 a.m. for us to pick up the car) talks with her a bit, his hands moving in expressive gestures. He starts up the car, revs the engine and in my imagination pulls out a brief case full of guns and cash, our Marketing Director makes the exchange, slides into the Mini, Anthony bounds over the door into the passenger seat. Jack slams the van into gear and we get back on the freeway as fast as we can.

Flowers in a car!
Mini with the top down.
The next day, we take the Mini over to the convention hall, we have already cleared it with the organization sponsoring the convention and expect to just drive the car right in, and park it at our booth.  Piece of cake.  
Enter the Union.  The Union has different rules and regulations than the convention center.  They let us know, that the car needs to have less than a quarter of a tank of gas, have the battery disconnected, and we need to hire a local Miami-Dade County fireman to keep an eye on the car 24 hours a day, to ensure against it catching fire.  A lot of string pulling, favor calling and other shenanigans commence, all to no avail.  The Union is not going to budge. The strategy session evolves as we wait for our other display materials to get unloaded from a long line of semis. 

The ideas flow,
  • Let’s syphon the gas out, a few calls to Pep Boys and a local gas station proves that with modern vehicles this is extremely hard to syphon gas, and illegal as well. 
  •  Let’s take the car to the hotel and pay the concierge a few bucks to leave the car idling outside the hotel for the next 8 hours or so.  Clicking away on smart phones, we learned a car burns between .4 to .6 gallons of gas in an hour at idol, the Mini has a full tank.
o   Maybe if we put a brick on the accelerator it would burn more gas?
  • Let’s make a huge contribution to the Union retirement fund.
  • Jack offers to take one for the team, “You guys can set up the display, and I’ll drive the car to Key West and back.”
  • Let’s redo the display and use a different type of vehicle, one without a motor.
    • How about a canoe?
    • How about a set of kayaks?
    • How about a rickshaw? (This would be sweet!)
    • Mountain bikes?
    • Beach crusiers?
    • A claw foot tub?      
  • Let’s try to return the car, and rent a different red convertible Mini with less gas in the tank.  (The call was made, no dice.)
  • Let’s leave the car idling outside the convention hall unlocked.  Without 2 keys, this seems like a great opportunity to have our display vehicle turned into a stolenvehicle.
  •  Let’s encourage the Union guys to figure a way to deal with it.  We send Jack out to the hot, loud industrial loading dock, saying in his best Jersey accent, “Whadda mean, yous can’t just take care a dis?”
  • Let’s drill a small hole in the gas tank and let the gas the drain out, then fill the hole with toothpaste when we are done.
  • Let's take the dashboard apart and disabling the gas gauge.
mini cooper tail lights.
Mini trunk, filled with flowers.
We set up the non-car elements of the display, it is a hot and sweaty affair since they don’t turn on the AC until after the show starts.  By 4 p.m. everybody is pretty tuckered out and the car situation is nowhere closer to being resolved. 
 
I see our Marketing Director grab the keys, “Alright Jack, go out and drive as much gas out of the car as you can.” His sunglasses, usually perched above his forehead, naturally pop down onto his eyes as he replies, “You got it, Boss.”

She points at me, “You go with him, and make sure he doesn’t do anything dumb.”

“Yes, Mama.”
Sun Valley at Miami Beach

Five minutes later Jack and I are rollin’ down famous Ocean Drive, top down, tunes bumpin’, pulling up alongside Ferraris and convertible Beemers.  Revving the engine like crazy, just to use up as much gas as possible.  Art deco architecture, palm trees, beautiful people, the Miami Vice soundtrack playing in my head. We wind out of Miami Beach, Jack pushing the accelerator down over the Julia Tuttle Causeway.  Now this is a fine day in the floral industry.
 
By now it is just approaching 5 p.m. and all of a sudden the soundtrack in my head comes to an abrupt halt, as Jack downshifts into a construction zone, which quickly becomes grid lock.  It’s about 95 degrees and super humid.  We are blasting the A.C. with the top down, to use up gas.   A dump truck is belching exhaust literally into my face in the low slung Mini. I-95 is a mess of traffic, orange cones and heavy machinery.  No girls in bikinis here, no Latin-techno music blasting out of bars, not a mojito insight, just grime and smoke.

An hour later we get into stop and go traffic, what a blessing.  And maybe another hour later, we break free of the traffic, and catch a stunning sunset rolling down the South Dixie Highway through Key Largo.
We stop for a picture, and turn the Mini around to drive back across the edge of the Everglades, racing as fast as we can, so we get the worst possible gas mileage, and hoping to still get late dinner.
Mini Cooper to Key Largo

The next morning our Marketing Director takes the Mini out for an early spin for a hundred miles or so, and we finally get the tank down to a quarter full. In case you’re wondering, this car gets about 44 miles to the gallon.
mini cooper with flowers
Sun Valley's Mini flower display
We pull it into the convention center, Pieter and the Sun Valley team burst into action, and a few hours later, the cherry red Mini Cooper has become the talk of the convention, and I realize you should wear sunscreen while in a convertible in Florida.
 
We are back in Miami this week, if you are coming to IFE, we will see you here.  If not, tune in next week to see what kind of trouble we were able to get into, and for another funny post about our last trip to Miami, read Tulip Credits.
Sun Valley's Flower talk blog