Product Description
Welcome spring to your home with this colorful Lilac in Vase Floral Arrangement! Blossoming faux lilac stems are placed in a glass bud vase and filled with clear faux water. They look so real, everyone will think you grew them yourself! These small vases are the perfect accent for side tables, powder rooms, mantels, guest rooms, entryways, or anywhere you want to add a touch of spring color to your home. Choose from Pink or Purple. Imported.
Inspiration
The colorful spring season in Colonial Williamsburg includes thousands of flowers in a rainbow of colors, heralding the return of warmer weather! From the large and glorious display of tulips in the Governor's Palace Gardens to smaller gardens such as the Alexander Craig Garden, you will find every color and variety of flower in the Historic Area.
In 1730, Robert Furber, an English nurseryman, published an unusual flower catalogue. On each of its twelve pages, he illustrated graceful arrangements of flowers grouped according to the month in which they bloom. Four hundred varieties, all of which could be purchased in London nurseries, were accurately illustrated and identified. Intended as a sales catalog, the "Twelve Months of Flowers" was an immediate artistic success and has been treasured for almost 300 years. John Custis IV maintained extensive gardens in Williamsburg, and publications such as Furber's Flowers influenced the selection of varieties. Learn more from Assistant Curator of Maps and Prints, Katie McKinney, in her deep dive article, Furber's Flowers.