Chủ Nhật, 25 tháng 3, 2012

Flowers in the Victorian Era



During the Victorian Era there were a huge eruption in the Hong Kong flowers martial arts styles, both in the stay and artificial types. The Victorians loved your 'everything overdone' type of decor wherever every space upon every table or even mantle had sometimes flowers, photos or perhaps ornaments on them.

Throughout the mid 1800's artificial flowers were manufactured from even more diverse supplies than ever before. The fabric included velvet, satin, muslin, calico, cambric, crepe, gauze, porcelain even steel and palm foliage. Wax flowers were very popular too in those days and became an art form in their own right. Flowers ended up even made out of real hair to commemorate loved ones in fact flowers grew to be so loved how the 'language of flowers' became a fringe movement in which all Hong Kong flowers carried meanings and also messages.
Although plants are given and obtained today most of us are unaware of the true 'language of flowers' but during the Victorian era while communications were not a lot of between the sexes the idea became popular to use flowers to both offer messages and communicate feelings to the woman concerned. Knowledge of the 'language of flowers' was regarded essential for all stylish young ladies in society and dictionaries of 'floriography' had been published which allowed the precise meaning of your flower or floral combination received.

When I was very young my Great Nanna who was very old, back then would sometimes tell me of the meaning of blossoms and how exciting it was to receive a posy or possibly a single bloom through an admirer that until that time she had no idea of. If the girl was in an especially good mood she would emerge a chocolate container containing paper extras, pretty ribbons along with bows, beautiful cards and flowers that she got pressed so long ago and her eyes would glaze over plus a little smile would likely play around her mouth as she appreciated, but never told.


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