Latest Orchids

Featuring orchids care

Orchids Care

Home

Links

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Orchids Resources

 

Orchid Flowers

Potted Orchid
Orchid Flower
Orchid Of The Month
Orchid Vendor
Moth Orchid
Exotic Orchids
Water Orchids
Orchid Laboratory Services
Orchids
Hydroponics

orchid flowers

White Orchid

white orchid

black orchid

parkside orchids

 


Orchids Resources


The Art of Making a Silk Orchid Flower


Silk was first developed in China, where silkworms and mulberry trees lived naturally. To produce silk fabric, weavers must collect silkworm larvae, and first spin it, as almost any other natural fiber, then weave the fine threads.

Hand-Made Silk Flowers

This fine fabric, perhaps first woven 8,000 years ago, was originally reserved for the Chinese Imperial family. Just as they developed the first silk garments, they developed the first silk flowers. A ladys elegant costume might include a silk orchid flower, or some other type of bloom, tucked into her hair.

As knowledge of silk cultivation spread west, so did the art of making artificial flowers. By the 1100s, Italians were making these flowers, and they probably produced a silk orchid flower, among many other varieties.

Machine-Made Silk Flowers

Until this point, artificial flowers, like almost everything else, had been hand-made. But as Europe experienced the industrial revolution, they invented machines to help make more life-like silk plants.

The Powerhouse Museum of Sydney, Australia displays an excellent late-Victorian machine used to make artificial flowers. This little machine looks something like a small die press, but in fact, it was the culmination of Victorian flower-making technology.

A flower-maker would use dies in this press to cut flower petals out of silk or other fabric. He would have had many sets of dies to produce different species of flowers. Though a silk orchid flower may have only five or six petals, the next step, shaping the blossom, would take some patience.

Silk flower petals were then joined together using glue and wires. Then each petal was shaped with a warm soldiering iron and molds that fit the curvature of various flowers. The final step was dyeing and painting, which on some species of silk orchid flower, must have taken hours on each petal.

Today, artificial flowers usually do not contain any actual silk, unless they are very fine pieces of art. Other materials, like polyester, muslin, and satin are much easier and cheaper to work with. However, in a nod to the old art of artificial flower making, most blossoms are still referred to as silk flowers.

What was once exclusive, available only to the richest members of society, is now every where. Not only in arrangements, but also a silk orchid flower might make a nice, everlasting Mothers Day corsage or a decoration on a wedding dress.

Read below for several examples of different places where you can purchase a purple orchid of your very own.

Black Orchid

The most suitable temperature range for dendrobium orchids is 16o C to 30o C, though most species would survive in temperatures as low as 7o C or high up to 33o C.

At the same time they are also some of the most exquisite flowers for which they are preferred at special occasions such as birthdays and weddings. Valueflora. National organization such as this one can be one of the best sources of current and accurate information for orchid growers.