Your wedding bouquet is one of the few details you physically carry through one of the biggest days of your life.
It’s in your photographs. It’s in your vows. It sits beside you at dinner, appears in quiet moments while getting ready, and somehow becomes part of the memory itself.
And then… a week later? Most bouquets wilt.
But a growing number of couples are choosing not to let that happen.
Pressed flower preservation – transforming wedding blooms into framed botanical artwork – is becoming one of the most meaningful post-wedding keepsakes globally, and South African brides are starting to embrace it too. Instead of preserving flowers in a box or drying them upside down, bouquets are carefully pressed, arranged and framed into pieces designed to live on your walls for decades.
Why pressed flower art is having a moment
Wedding trends have shifted dramatically over the past few years.
Couples are spending more intentionally – choosing fewer throwaway details and investing in meaningful heirloom pieces instead. Pressed floral art fits perfectly into that mindset.
Unlike resin preservation (which some couples note can yellow over time), pressed floral artwork creates a lighter, gallery-style finish that feels timeless and easier to style in modern homes. Community conversations around bouquet preservation also show increasing preference for pressed pieces because they display beautifully and feel less bulky than traditional keepsakes.
The appeal is simple:
- It becomes actual artwork rather than storage
- You preserve a real piece of your wedding day
- Every frame is entirely unique
- It doubles as meaningful home décor
How wedding flower preservation actually works
Professional pressed flower preservation is more involved than simply placing blooms inside a book.
Studios carefully deconstruct bouquets bloom by bloom, remove moisture through controlled pressing and drying, then rebuild the arrangement into a custom composition before sealing it behind archival-grade glass.
Most preservation artists recommend receiving flowers within 24–72 hours after the wedding, while blooms are still fresh. Timing matters more than most couples realise.
A few flowers press especially beautifully:
- Spray roses
- Garden roses
- Cosmos
- Daisies
- Delphinium
- Lisianthus
- Sweet peas
Thicker blooms (like some orchids or calla lilies) may require specialised handling or alternative preservation methods.
Can you press your bouquet yourself?
Absolutely — if you’re patient. The basic process looks like this:
1. Separate the bouquet – Remove blooms individually instead of pressing the bouquet whole.
2. Air-dry first – Fresh flowers often hold too much moisture. Allow blooms to rest before pressing.
3. Layer properly – Use absorbent paper with even pressure between layers.
4. Wait it out – Depending on bloom type and climate, pressing can take one to two weeks.
5. Design before framing – Arrange first, glue second. Pressed floral composition is where the magic happens.
If you’re emotionally attached to the bouquet though? Consider outsourcing. There’s no redo button.
South African studios that can preserve your wedding flowers for you
Forget Me Not (Pty) Ltd
A preservation-led studio creating custom botanical keepsakes and floral artworks.
- Location: Randburg, Johannesburg
- Estimated pricing: From approximately R2,500–R8,000+ depending on frame size and complexity (confirm directly for custom quotations)
- Contact: +27 68 849 4639 / [email protected]
- Website: ForgetMeNotTM
- Best for: Couples wanting bespoke framed floral keepsakes.
LOULOU Flower Studio
Known primarily for floral design, with bespoke floral artistry and preservation conversations increasingly becoming part of the offering space.
- Location: Pinelands, Cape Town
- Estimated pricing: Custom quote basis (expect premium floral art pricing depending on scale)
- Contact: +27 83 781 3148 / [email protected]
- Website: LoulouFlowerStudio
- Best for: Couples wanting floral design expertise translated into keepsake art.
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VELT designs
A floral-focused creative studio producing highly design-conscious botanical work.
- Location: V&A Waterfront, Cape Town
- Estimated pricing: Bespoke commissions; approximately R3,000–R10,000+ depending on artwork scope
- Contact: +27 81 333 3077 / [email protected]
- Website: VELT
- Best for: Modern couples who want their bouquet to become statement interior décor.
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Belle En Rose Resin
While known for resin preservation, this is worth considering if you love preserving florals in artistic formats beyond traditional pressing.
- Location: South Africa
- Estimated pricing: From approximately R2,000+ depending on piece type
- Contact: +27 71 213 6484 / [email protected]
- Website: BelleEnRoseResin
- Best for: Couples exploring alternative bouquet preservation styles.
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Before you hand over your bouquet: what preservation artists wish couples knew
- Tell your florist beforehand that you plan to preserve the bouquet.
- Keep stems in water after the wedding.
- Avoid leaving flowers in direct sunlight.
- Refrigerate rather than freeze if preservation won’t happen immediately.
- Book your preservation artist before the wedding date where possible.
Your flowers won’t stay exactly the same – colours soften, petals shift and time leaves its own signature – but that’s also part of the beauty.
The takeaway
Your wedding flowers were never meant to last forever.
But the feeling attached to them can.
Pressed flower art turns something fleeting into something you’ll pass every day in your hallway, bedroom or home office – a quiet reminder that one beautiful day actually happened.
And years later, that frame may end up becoming one of the few wedding details that still lives with you.
ALSO SEE: Flowers in season for winter weddings: The best cold-weather blooms for bouquets and décor
Flowers in season for winter weddings: The best cold-weather blooms for bouquets and décor
Featured image: Pinterest

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