All My Friends are Flowers

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Denim Whale Tutorial & Printable Pattern

December 31, 2013 by Lacey

Whales-on-Books-for-final-blog-post

The printable pattern for this whale costs $4.99and you can download it from my Etsy shop HERE All proceeds go towards keeping this blog up and running.  Thanks for your support!

Readers get 20% off their purchase with coupon code : ALLMYFRIENDS

The download comes with two files:

  • The Printable Patterns
    • o This pattern is a five page document, meant to be printed on standard 8.5” x 11” printer paper.
      o Instructions are included for cutting out and assembling the pattern
  • Tutorial
    o The tutorial includes detailed color photos and step by step instructions.

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE WHALE PATTERN AND TUTORIAL

For a limited time get my newest plushie  FOX pattern for $.50 with code NEW PATTERN.   Click HERE

Interested in more of my custom goods?

 Check out this beautiful word art shop here

 

Filed Under: Here's How, Life + Baby, Slider

Baby Girl Nursery Flower Printable

December 28, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I found out last week that I’m having a little baby girl!  When the ultrasound technician announced that my baby was a she I was flooded with such a mix of emotions.  Of course I was absolutely excited, but with the excitement came some fear too.

I flashed back to the hardest parts of being a girl. I remembered not having the “right” kind of toys to play with the other girls in our neighborhood.  I remembered eating lunch in the library by myself all through eigth grade.  I remembered crossing my fingers {sometimes in vain} that I would get asked to a school dance.

After the ultrasound as I was thinking about all these things wondered how I made it through.  Then I realized I not only survived but flourished because of my awesome family and specifically my own wonderful mother.  She taught me to fall in love with the garden, the feeling of really good bread dough, and how to be confident and happy with myself.  She tucked bouncy balls in my pocket to play with at recess, which is the surest way to make friends.  She reminded me that being true to myself felt better than eating lunch at the popular table. And she gave me the advice that lead me to my wonderful husband: boys make the best friends.

So the fear at having a baby girl went away completely and the excitement took over.  I get to be the mom to my very own little woman. I get to give someone what my mom gave me.  I get to teach someone how to bake chocolate chip cookies, and how to deadhead roses.

I’ve come to terms with pink and I’m starting to decorate my little girls nursery. With the hopes of instilling in her a love of dirt, I’m painting some decorations.  I’m sharing this watercolor printable.  The one stipulation is that you use it for personal use only.  Enjoy!

click here to download

Filed Under: Life + Baby, Projects

Succulent Container Gardens at Disneyland

July 2, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

A few weeks ago I was at the happiest place on earth.  We traveled to Disneyland with my parents, five siblings, and niece.  It had been over three years since we’d all been on vacation together, and it was a blast.  Disneyland is magical, there’s no question about that. I believe part of the magic comes from attention to detail, specifically in their planting.

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Filed Under: Annuals, Container Gardening, Design Tips, Travel

Container Gardens at Gardener Village

June 1, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

 

 

DSCF4100

 

I have a May birthday. But even better than having a birthday during the month that the official growing season starts in Utah, I have an end of May birthday. This means that the wisteria is blooming, calibrachoa and potato vine are starting to creep down the sides of planted containers, and lilacs have just stopped blooming but viburnums are still going strong.

When I was growing up anticipation of my birthday was always coupled with that of the end of the school year. Now that I am relatively “grown up” and I teach school the excitement of the end of the school year is even more intensified even more. This might be because this was my very first year teaching high school. or maybe because I’m leaving for Disneyland the first of June. I’m guessing a combination of both. Which, lets be honest, do not sound like things that a normal 23 year old is excited about on their birthday. But hey, that’s just how much I love Disneyland.

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Filed Under: Annuals, Container Gardening

How to Grow Dahlias

May 19, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

Its been a while.  Between attending night classes to get my teaching license and trying to wrap up my first year teaching high school its been a little bit hectic.  But school is out in a week and a half so there are no more excuses.

I’m going to write about something I’ve been meaning to write since last summer: Dahlias.  I had a childhood friend whose mother grew fantastic dahlias under their bay window.  The blossoms ranged in color from bright pink to fiery orange.  Some blooms were small, others spanned about eight inches across. Time passed and I had mostly forgotten about this vibrant, flowering tuber until a trip to the Madrid Botanical Gardens.

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Filed Under: Annuals, Here's How

How to Take Care of Your Air Plant- Tillandsia

March 20, 2013 by Lacey 1 Comment

All through high school and into college I worked at a beautiful garden center.  The owner’s sister managed the greenhouse.  I spent countless hours learning how to properly water hydrangeas, and trim angel vine topiaries.  Upon return from a buying trip in California, she brought me an air plant and a 100 year old chunk of grape wood to display it on.  Sadly, my air plant wasn’t long lived.  Because it requires so little care, air plants can be easily forgotten. The waterings were so infrequent that I missed them all together, and it was up on an obscure shelf where the air plant easily went unnoticed.

Fast forward to last weekend.  I got my hands on a beautiful piece of cholla cactus with the idea of decorating my coffee table.  I thought back to Christine and my 100 year old grape wood and decided to give another air plant a try.  I drove up to Cactus and Tropicals, a nursery that specializes in houseplants, to purchase the perfect Tillandsia.  With the hopes of keeping this air plant alive, I’ve researched Tillandsia and its care requirements.

So… air plants or Tillandsia grow the best in humid environments.  Now my apartment in Orem, UT is anything but humid. The good news is that humidity can be falsified.  By lightly misting the air plant once or twice a week, or soaking it in a bowl of water every two weeks, the plant can survive in drier climates.

Tillandsias prefer bright, filtered light.  Direct light from window sills are is a definite no.  Instead try place your plant a few feet away from a bright window.

Because air plants survive without soil, they can be attached to pretty much anything.  Branches of driftwood, cholla cactus, manzanita, or grape wood are great decorative options.  You can also use sea shells, rock, or glass terrariums.  Air plants can be mounted using a non water soluble glue or silicone caulk.

Filed Under: Annuals, Here's How, Houseplants

Patience. . . .

March 1, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

Snow still wraps itself tightly around the perimeter of my yard forming a barrier that thwarts the hopeful bulbs patiently waiting their turn to peek through snowy boundaries and test the cool temperatures of Spring.  The border hold me at bay like a child waiting for a turn at a pinata.
jean jaques rousseau, allmyfriendsareflowers.com
I hear that temperatures will soar by Saturday and I’ve mentioned to my children that Saturday will be a yard work day.  I think the threat is just real enough that they may be hoping for one last snow storm –nothing too big -just something that will be a bit of a deterrent for a mom who is anxious get started in the yard.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Online Plant Catalogs

February 6, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I love shopping at my local garden center.  Supporting my community’s economy is just one benefit of this style of shopping. The other reason is much more selfish.  When I venture to my favorite garden center I get to wander through displays of arborvitaes and knock out roses.  I never make a quick trip to my favorite nursery, I’ll spend an hour or more meandering down the rows of perennials, looking at wave petunias and listening to the babbling of fountains.   A purchase as simple as a packet of seeds or a bag of planting mix turns into a quest for design inspiration as a stroll, very slowly, towards the cash register. 
But…. If you, like me, are living in a climate where nurseries are not open year round you can run into some problems.  Lack of seeds to start in March, or limited stock and supply when garden centers emerge from hibernation in early spring can be frustrating.  There is a solution.  Join me on a walk through a virtual nursery open 365 days a year 24/7.  Welcome to the world of Burpee. 
I check my mailbox religiously this time of year for the Burpee catalog, but there is really no need to wait.  Their website is more interactive, informative, and easy to use.  At www.burpee.com you can browse through their offerings of vegetables, flowers, perennials, herbs, and fruit.  They even offer organics and heirloom varieties.  Under each of these categories you’ll find new plant varieties, some Burpee exclusives that you’ll only find on their site or in their catalog.  This year I’m looking forward to trying…..
On Deck Corn
Shooting Stars Eggplant
Ava Agastache
Sante Shasta Daisy
Burpee offers both seeds and started plants, giving you either the satisfaction of beginning your own garden, or a jump start on the season.  I’ve never had many concerns with ordering seed online.  I’ve known that when the seed arrived I could plant them at my leisure.  Growing plants were an entirely different matter.  I worried about trying to time my order and shipping with appropriate planting times for my zone.  Burpee takes away all of those worries and concerns.  They delay shipping for your products until the appropriate planting time for your zone. 
Log on to Burpee.com, take a walk through the veggies and meander through the perennials.  I’m sure you’ll find inspiration, just like in your favorite garden center.  The only thing missing will be the smell of honeysuckle, the crunch of gravel, and the sound of fountains.     
*all photos from www.burpee.com 

Filed Under: Annuals, Herbs, Veggies

The Resurrection Fern

January 24, 2013 by Lacey Leave a Comment

I love houseplants in the winter.  There’s something about greenery indoors in the middle of a bleak January that eases my cabin feaver.  Many housplants {especially ferns} help purify and clean the indoor air.  Clean air is hard to come by this week due to the Utah Valley inversion.  When I look out my window at the hazy smog I feel some comfort in the fact that I have a few housplants working to rid my air of the toxins creeping in from outside. Yes, I love housplants in the winter, but my love for housplants is seasonal.

I can’t stand having houseplants in the summer. When the garden is producing delicious leafy things, when the perennials are in full blossom, and the patio containers have verbena trickling down their sides I have little tolerance for indoor plants.  This might seem ungrateful, considering all they did for me over the winter, but its the turth.  My plants indoors can feel neglected since I’m spending most my time outside deadheading and fertilizing.  So I usually gather up all my housplants and move them to the shadier parts of my yard. The lucky survivors of a few cool september nights have the luxury of being invited back in for the winter {providing they bring no insects or pests with them}.

There is another solution for my seasonal need for indoor green.  How about a plant you can kill near the end of March when the tulips begin to bloom and revive in October when you’ve trimmed your last perennial to the ground.  Impossible you say?  Let me introduce you to the resurrection fern.

This fern, native to the southeastern United States and Africa, is a remarkable little plant.  Its name is derived from its ability to survive very long periods of drought.  This fern is an epiphyte or an air plant, which means it gets nutrients and water from the air.  You can set them in a dish of water and within minutes they’ll start to open their fronds and turn green.  A constant supply of water will keep them happy and thriving.  As their water supply dries out they begin to curl and turn brown once again. 

I like to keep mine on my coffee table.  There’s no conversation piece like a plant that cant be killed.  During the summer months I store it carfully in a dry, dark place and bring it out agian in winter for some air-purifying greenery.

I found mine at a local specialty nursery, Cactus and Tropicals in Salt Lake City, but you can also order them online.  You can also find them on Amazon sold in different sizes and varieties. 

Filed Under: Here's How, Houseplants, Uncategorized

Early Blooming Spring Perennials

January 7, 2013 by Lacey 1 Comment

The holidays are finally over.  I dont know what it is, but leading up to Christmas I can’t get enough snow.  I think that chilly days are festive and that evergreens look majestic next to skeleton-like maples.  But come the 26th the Christmas tree cant come down fast enough and I rush to my mailbox every afternoon to see if the Burpee catalog has arrived.  My feelings about snow go from festive to tolerant, as I remind myself that the snow showers of January and February provide for luschious July gardens. 

In anticipation for a spring that will come, I’ve compiled a few of my early spring favorites.  These are the resiliant few that can withstand the sometimes frigid Utah spring nights.  I’ve put them outdoors in early March and had great success {as well as much needed outdoor color}.  A word of warning: although the plants themselves can withstand  very cool tempuratures, night time frosts can damage the colorful blossoms.  By covering blooms with a frost cloth, towel, or sheet, you can keep the frost from settling on the blooms. 

All My Friends are Flowers
Favorite Hardy Early Blooming Perennials

1) Bellis or English Daisy {Bellis perennis}

picture found here

This daisy comes in solid or mixed colors and works well in containers or beds.

USDA Zones: 4-8
Height: 6-12”
Width: 6”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring, early-mid fall

2) Rockfoil {Saxifraga x arendsii}

picture found here

USDA Zones: 4-8
Height: 6-8”
Width: 6-9”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring

3) English Primrose {Primula vulgaris}

picture found here

USDA Zones: 3-9
Height: 6-8”
Width: 6-9”
Sun: Full Sun
Bloom Time: early-mid spring

Looking for more early spring color?  Click on a picture below to check out other All My Friends favorites!

 
 

Filed Under: Perennials, Uncategorized

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Printable Pattern & Tutorial

Printable Pattern & Tutorial

DIY Plush Play Veggies + Printable Transfers

DIY Plush Play Veggies + Printable Transfers

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How to Divide Ferns

How to Divide Ferns

Succulent Container Gardens at Disneyland

Succulent Container Gardens at Disneyland

Printable Denim Whale Pattern

Printable Denim Whale Pattern

All My Friends are Flowers

All My Friends are Flowers

Hello there, I'm Lacey.

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