Wedding Flowers
Weddings are a time to rejoice in the strength of life and its ability to renew itself with the new bonds we tie. Weddings are ornamental and celebratory, which is one reason why they usually include wedding flowers. No bond of matrimony would be complete without an assortment of wedding flowers spanning all the colors and shapes imaginable. While the traditional colors for wedding flowers are red, pink, white, and purple, there is no rule admonishing these specific bouquets. One can also buy one's wedding flowers in more exotic and exciting colors such as yellow, orange, or blue. While Roses, Orchids and Lilies still dominate the usual set of wedding flowers, it is not unusual to see a South American wedding, for example, making use of such striking wedding flowers as the Tropical Beauty. As we enter the age of choice-range, it is important to make up one's own mind about what beauty is-this is why when choosing your wedding flowers you must be executing your personal vision-no matter how strange it may be compared to the "norm."
Wedding flowers also have a time-celebrated role in a wedding's aftermath, when the groom and bride progress down the church steps amongst showers of rice. The bride throws a bouquet of wedding flowers into the crowd and unmarried women all grasp for a chance to be, supposedly, the next person married. Although it may not always be this person who marries first, the tradition stands firm, and the wedding flowers fly wistfully through the air at any well-arranged marriage. As well as during the ceremony, wedding flowers have a role in the party that ensues. Large arrangements of wedding flowers are almost always found at the banquets and balls that any high-class marriage planner usually arranges-peppering the décor with colors, and celebrating the new lives of both the bride and the groom.
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