Long Time Blooming
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Artificial flowers got their start in the 1940s in the millinery business as decorations for women’s hats. Eventually hats went out of style, but the silk flowers stayed.
* The 1950s ushered in big, bright plastic daisies and sunflowers. (They are now kitsch.)
* Porcelain flowers were popular in the late ‘60s, but were high-priced and shattered easily.
* By the 1980s, attempts to reproduce nature had improved with polished cotton and delicate-weave polyester blends.
* Today, the hot, new wave is parchment covered with a thin latex. Designers also are creating flowers that have never existed in nature, such as blue roses with eight-foot stems.
Source: Catherine Hillen-Rulloda, Southern California School of Floral Design, Fullerton