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We recreated the famous dahlia wall originally created at the Seattle Wholesale Flower Market - although we never intended it to look exactly like the original - it did. |
Sometimes things just don't go as planned, and last weekend we learned a lesson about how influence can sometimes backfire. Just a week before our first frost date, a casual conversation with Grace Lam from FiveForksFarm (a flower farm that many of you have seen featured by Erin on Floret Farm's blog), and myself were talking about how this years serious drought here in New England. Dahlia crops across the northeast have been terrible, due to the extreme heat and the record breaking drought.
I went to visit Grace to see if she could donate some dahlias for arrangements at the Dahlia Show at Tower Hill, since I was afraid that we would have only a few entries. Grace was talking about this dahlia wall that she had seen at the Seattle Wholesale Growers Market and She thought that maybe her farm and the members of the Dahlia Society might like to create something like this, but we didn't have enough time to get something designed in 2 days, but that maybe we could create something their fall festival on Columbus Day weekend.
What happened next was magic.
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Dahlias from our 150 plants were limited to just about 30 blooms. That's how bad our dahlias were this year. |
I Googled the flower wall and was blown away. I've done many flower installations in the past, with camellias, clever flowers and even dahlias, always on a black chalkboard background ( you've seen many of those here), but this was a different concept - as it used water pics. I said' Oh my God, we need to do something like this". How can we all collaborate and design something in a week? All hands on deck, husbands and friends, co-workers and anyone we could get to volunteer came together. What we didn't realize in the end, was that our dahlia wall, once it came together, would look EXACTLY like the one in the Seattle Wholesale Flower Market.
Exactly.
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The dahlias at Five Forks Farms were scarce as well, beautiful, but scarce. |
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Joe overlooking the dahlia fields at Five Forks Farms, which is about 8 miles from our house. |
Knowing that we had to act quickly, we sent an email out to all of the dahlia society members in Massachusetts, called Tower Hill to see if they would be willing to allow us to create something, and then we asked all of our friends to see if they could help source materials, from wood, to stain, to test tubes, calligraphy - anything that they could bring on Friday to help celebrate the last blast of dahlias in our garden.
Joe's nephew Curtis offered to build a wall for us, and I just told him to keep it small. At first we thought that a 30 foot wall would be best, and that we could use it for the camellia show and daylily show as well, but I advised him to make it 6 x 8 feet. Still large, but small enough to fit on Joes truck.
On Friday morning, folks arrived in the lobby of Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, MA. Cars with buckets of dahlias picked in members gardens, and some kindly donated from a few flower farms in the area - both in Rhode Island and from FiveForksFarm. A mess of colors, but somehow we knew ( or at least, I kept assuring Grace) that I was confident that it would all come together.
Joe and I argued a lot about the color order. He felt that we should arrange the colors differently, but I had to keep explaining to him that color order is color order, and we can't change color physics. IT took a couple of hours to select the darkest tones, and the brightest tones, the coolest hues and the warmest hues.
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It took a few trys to get the colors arranged just right. |
You will see that on the left side colors have yellow in them, and on the right, they are bluer. We also wanted to have every variety labeled properly, and mostly, we didn't want to show just cut flower varieties, but some of every dahlia class available, as this needed to function as an educational display as well, to show the scope available in the dahlia world.

If you want to see how sinfully close our wall ended up looking like the original? Then check out this link at FlertyFleurs. We decided to use their same hashtag of #dahliawall, at least some credit could be shared. And maybe, it's best that it ended up being an exact replica, and not a blue wall or a white wall which in some way, might just have been worse, a 'close' homage is more of a cheat than an exact replica. The worst part was, Joe kept saying "it's looking exactly like that wall in the picture dudes"..... but again, it was too late.
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The completed dahlia wall installed in the lobby at Tower Hill Botanic Garden. It was stunning, and the hardest part was labeling each blossom. |
I mean, how do you explain all of this after the fact? All I can say is, as an artist and designer myself, it was never our intention to end up looking exactly as if we copied it, but I think given that we all used the same reference shots, we never took the time to create something different. So, I call it 'a homage' to a splendid creation that they did on the west coast, and I hope that since we are all designers in one way or another, that we understand how ideas move when shared.
This effort was the result of a great idea invented in Seattle (by Flirtyfleurs Alicia Schwede and gatherdesignco Amy Kunzel-Patterson - the original creators and designers of this concept). A bunch of folks who raise dahlias in their back yard, their family members who helped make the wall who obviously copied the exact wall, and the the color of the wall ( it took three tries to get the right color, starting with grey stain, a blue stain and then at the last minute, a dark grey paint - exactly as the Seattle wall. It just got worse once we added the calligraphy for the variety names. Too late to turn back. All we could do would be to credit the original creators, and prey for forgiveness. After all - it was too beautiful to destroy at this point.
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Dahlias are so diverse and their colors almost represent every color in the color wheel, that it was amazing to see the different shapes and forms all within each color group. |
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This morning, our dahlias looked like this. A full, deep freeze has officially ended the dahlia season here in New England. |