Thistles and Roses

Thistles and Roses Floristry, floral art and design for occasions and for the home. ABOUT ME

Thistles and Roses is based in a small rural workshop just outside Edinburgh.
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The name 'Thistles and Roses' is inspired by the pretty English Rose and the proud Scottish Thistle. I completed professional training with Narcissus, Edinburgh, and offer bespoke floral design to suit your occasion and reflect your individual style. I love to create natural, seasonal and individual styles for each special occasion. Please click on the photos to see some images of my work in a var

iety of styles. COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATIONS AND QUOTES

I offer individual consultations which allow important time for you to discuss your ideas with me in detail, whatever the venue, whatever the occasion. I would be glad to arrange a meeting with you at home, at work or at your venue. Please contact me here or via my website for more details.

Bouquet of dreams. With  xx
27/06/2022

Bouquet of dreams. With xx

Glorious wedding at Dunglass.
27/06/2022

Glorious wedding at Dunglass.

Happy new year to you all! I enjoyed this little history of the fascinating traditions of Twelfth Night and hope you wil...
05/01/2022

Happy new year to you all! I enjoyed this little history of the fascinating traditions of Twelfth Night and hope you will too Xx

Today is Twelfth Night. It’s the eve of Epiphany, the official end of the Christmas holiday season, and the day on which many people take down their Christmas decorations or risk bad luck for the coming year. Poet Robert Herrick wrote, “Down with the rosemary, and so. Down with the bays and mistletoe; Down with the holly, ivy, all, Wherewith ye dress’d the Christmas Hall.” It’s a last Yuletide hurrah before everyone returns to the mundane workaday world of the rest of the year. Though the origin of the celebration dates back to the Roman Saturnalia, most of the traditional observances of the holiday that have survived date back to medieval England. It was the end of a holiday season that began with All Hallows Eve and, in some cultures, it also marks the beginning of the Carnival season.

It’s a Twelfth Night tradition to choose a king and queen for the festivities. Usually this involves beans and baked goods. In English celebrations a plum cake is baked with a bean and a pea inside. If a man finds the bean he is crowned the Twelfth Night King, also known as the Lord of Misrule. The woman who finds the pea is crowned Queen, but if a woman finds the bean instead of the pea she chooses her own king.

Part of the Twelfth Night tradition involves pranks, role reversals, and general chaos. Servants dressed as masters, men dressed as women, and people roamed the streets in gangs, decked out in costumes and blackened faces. Shakespeare’s play Twelfth Night features many of the traditional elements of the holiday.

In some parts of England Twelfth Night was also traditionally associated with apples and apple trees. People would troop out to their fruit orchards bearing a hot, spiced mixture of cider and ale for the “wassailing of the trees.” They would pour the wassail on the ground over the trees’ roots and sing songs and drink toasts to the health of their orchards. They also hung bits of cider-soaked toast in the trees to feed the birds. The attention paid to the orchards during the wassailing would be repaid with a bountiful harvest the following fall.

English settlers in the Colonies brought the Twelfth Night tradition with them. In colonial Virginia it was customary to hold a large and elegant ball. Revelers chose a king and queen using the customary cake method; it was the king’s duty to host the next year’s Twelfth Night ball and the queen was given the honor of baking the next year’s cake. George and Martha Washington didn’t usually do much for Christmas except attend church but they often hosted elaborate Twelfth Night celebrations. It was also their anniversary; they’d been married on January 5, 1759. Martha Washington left behind her recipe for an enormous Twelfth Night cake among her papers at Mount Vernon. The recipe called for 40 eggs, four pounds of sugar, and five pounds of dried fruit. It wasn’t until the mid-1800s that Christmas became the primary holiday of the season in America and, at that point, Twelfth Night celebrations all but disappeared.

The beautiful symbolism of Yuletide foliage.
05/12/2021

The beautiful symbolism of Yuletide foliage.

PLANTS OF THE YULETIDE
History shows that the botanicals we used for holidays were those thriving in that season. Symbolic Yuletide and Solstice botanicals used for decorations include:
•Evergreens (spruce, arborvitae, Christmas fern and wintergreen) as symbols of immortality since they were among the only botanicals to stay green when all others lost their leaves.
•Yews represented the death of the old year and were a connection between this world and the next.
•Oak trees were revered for being long-lived. Even though they were not evergreen, they were symbols of eternal life and considered a source of protection, strength, and endurance.
•Rosemary, an evergreen shrub in warm climates, was called the herb of the sun.
*Bay, an evergreen herb used in holiday garlands and comforting teas. Bay laurel also signifies achievement and celebration.
•Birch trees symbolized new beginnings.
•Mistletoe stood for peace, happiness and smooches.
•Holly was used for magical protection and good luck.
•Ivy symbolized fidelity, faithfulness, and healing and was made into wreaths and garlands to decorate during the winter.
•Pine symbolized peace, healing, and joy.

Artist ~ Carlton Alfred Smith (1853-1946)

03/08/2021
13/07/2021
21/06/2021

All home grown at T&R HQ. They smell DIVINE. isn’t nature extraordinary? Continuing on the theme of
21/06/2021

All home grown at T&R HQ. They smell DIVINE. isn’t nature extraordinary? Continuing on the theme of

Jewel colours for summer.
17/06/2021

Jewel colours for summer.

A little view of the garden over the top of a giant peony in today’s bouquet. One for charity - a prize for a Movember r...
17/06/2021

A little view of the garden over the top of a giant peony in today’s bouquet. One for charity - a prize for a Movember raffle!

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Currie
Edinburgh

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