Sending flowers is one way of expressing any number of affections. If someone would like to send a gift to someone who is very dear to them, they would probably choose red roses, long stemmed and without the vase. If one knows the person and if she has many vases, sending roses in a vase is in questionable taste plus an unnecessary expense on the sender's part. If the person is in a hospital and one would like to send flowers, a vase would, of course be necessary. Sending floral bouquets is an art in the expression of affections, good taste and meeting of an obligation.
A bright assortment of flowers with a stuffed animal would make an appropriate gift for a birthday, whether to a young person or to one up in years. It is especially thoughtful if one can't make the birthday oneself and one wants it delivered on the date of the cherished person's birthday. The kind of flowers someone chooses to send is also an indication of the sender. Consider the obligatory Mother's Day gift. Taking Mom out to lunch is really fine but without a corsage or an orchid or a giant mum, one is rather saying one only has lunch once a year with one's mother out of obligation.
Send flowers to Mom on Mother's Day in whatever type and assortment with a small box of quality chocolates and some small toy she can save, and one will be her favorite person for the rest of the year. Most people are socially motivated, not only by culture but by nature, and like to show others that they are remembered and cherished by simple acts of generosity from others. Send a gift because one values the person to whom the gift will be delivered to and make the gift appropriate to the relationship one has to the receiver of the gift.
Send special floral bouquets to let the family of a deceased person that one knew or is related to someone that one knows, how one cares about their grief and that one will be there to lessen the family's sorrow.
Floral arrangements sent to a funeral home are also in questionable taste if one sends huge floral arrangements. The huge arrangements that are usually placed along the coffin are arranged by the family of the deceased. One's expression of sympathy should be in smaller arrangements that can be placed in the viewing room.
Do not send flowers to the family's home, if ossible, as the usual expressions of shared grief sent to the home are food trays and fruit baskets.
Send flowers for whatever reason as long as the choice of arrangement and the reasons for sending the gifts are appropriate.
Author Resource:-
Author is a freelance writer. For more information on hampton flowers delivery please visit http://www.norfolkflorist.com/.