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Flower Arranging a la Parisienne

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Flower Arranging a la Parisienne

September 10, 2012

Go outside and pick a few flowers. Tiny daisies and Gypsophila? You’ll need the Minuscules vase. Violets or cyclamen? Those are for the Violettiers vase…

Cécile Daladier creates vases inspired by flower type; vases that encourage picking flowers from the garden, between the pavement, or from a mountain top. Daladier’s vases encourage instant, simple arrangements; as she says, “a small garden on the table.”

Before working with clay, Daladier studied fine arts and music, drawing inspiration from both water and flowers. So she combined the two to focus on botanicals, singular ceramics that she shapes and fires at her studio in the Drôme region of France. At home in Paris, Daladier collaborates with partner Nicolas Soulier under the name Assaï, building Jardins Miroirs and their Capteurs collection (large-scale glass and iron sculptures made to collect water). All ceramics are sold by weight, €100 per kilo via Cécile Daladier.

N.B.: For a look at the couple’s rooftop garden, see A Ceramicist and an Architect in Paris.

Above: The Violettiers Vase, made for the smallest of stems.

Above: Daladier arranging blooms into a large ceramic vessel at her Rue Cels showroom in Paris.

Above: An instant arrangement of Hellebores, dusty miller, and Muscari.

Above: Single stem vases glazed in a slightly opaque white.

Above: The Tulipier Vase, made for groupings of stems or larger flowers like roses, tulips, and peonies. The little chimneys help hold the natural shape of the bouquet.

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