I'll start off this blog post apologizing for all the scrolling you'll have to do for this post, but I've been compiling pictures for my last post for awhile so there are a lot of them. Flowers are important part of design and particularly architecture. Although they are probably one of the first things I notice about any establishment, I think for many people they go largely unnoticed. Flowers are an important part of design, however. They are especially important in a city like London, where bringing nature to the city is crucial for creating a livable environment. Flower truly do require design in order to integrate them into their environment properly.
This wall of flowers was a work of art in Copenhagen. Right by the famous Little Mermaid Statue, these flowers did not blend with their environment but were a statement in themselves.
There were many different flowers in the Tivoli, but all of them matched the feel of the exhibit in which they were displayed. These were long stemmed and matched the whimsical, fairy-like atmosphere of their location in the park.
In a relatively ill-lit, unadorned section of Copenhagen, a cluster of brightly colored flowers by the train station can make all the difference.
These hydrangeas (my favorite!) at the Victoria and Albert museum were stunning and seasonal. They not only show that it is summertime in the many pictures that will be taken there, but echo the famous patterns and textiles the V&A is famous for.
It would be very difficult to find an old-fashioned pub in England that did not have hanging flower pots like this one in Stratford-upon-Avon. Hanging flower pots are much like gold-writing in that they indicate you have come across a British pub.
In Bath, we saw a great deal of flower boxes. In a city that is made up of mostly tan buildings, these bring a little color and life into the city.
A flower box on a window to the Roman Baths. (That's the abbey in the background).
Flowers can also be designed to blend in with their natural environment. The flowers in the Buckingham Palace gardens were all in white. This did not detract from the vast expanse of green in the gardens like brightly colored flowers would have. This creates an image of a more traditional English landscape.
There is even an element of design on how you display flowers for selling! At the Columbia Road Flower Market, this vendor makes an eye catching display using a gradient of of Pink Hydrangeas.
































