How to Create Romantic Florals With Shabby Chic Founder Rachel Ashwell

The series “Seasonal Design” covers home decor and how flowers elevate an environment. In this story, we speak to Shabby Chic® creator Rachel Ashwell about how to create romantic floral designs for spring, or any time of year.

romantic florals with Rachel Ashwell arranging white flowers

Rachel Ashwell created one of the most popular design styles of all time — the global phenomenon known as Shabby Chic®. But, for her, it’s more about the emotion than the look. “The secret to life is the feeling,” she says. “Knowing what you feel and being conscious of that, whether in a space, in your clothing, or with a person, is everything.”

And in her iconic designs of soft, floral upholstery fabrics, weather-worn furniture, and vintage pieces, she creates the feeling of serenity with an ethereal, dreamlike quality.

That otherworld feeling flows from her mantra of “beauty, comfort, and function,” a filter that applies to everything in her solo store in Santa Monica, California, and her signature brands sold at leading retailers. Though known since 1989 for overstuffed, oversized, unwind-here soft furniture and fabrics and a white and pastel palette, Ashwell insists she is not a design trendsetter or even an interior designer.

Instead, her style has a “timeless, traditional neutrality about it” she says. Layering multiple looks like incorporating vintage flea-market finds like a gold mirror or crystal chandelier with an overstuffed chair is her unique way of telling a story through design. In her aesthetic, one can also see — and feel — her English countryside roots and love of Los Angeles, where she mostly lives.

Where Rachel Ashwell finds inspiration

Ashwell considers herself a highly sensitive and soulful person. “The escape of beauty is a very important element in my life.” Whether that’s a sojourn to her native English countryside or a stretch of time in a Malibu surf shack, she finds the enduring beauty of nature soothing. Flowers are a huge part of that inspiration, whether found in a beautiful old chintz fabric, a teeming floral garden, or a chandelier with crystal-shaped flowers.

Flowers enrich my soul and inspire my sense of beauty.

Rachel Ashwell

And then there are Ashwell’s romantic floral arrangements. They combine a soft nostalgia with classic tradition. She says she has a “spiritual connection to the beauty of blooms.”

Her garden in Santa Monica is “a heaven on earth of a mass of blooms,” she says, filled with English garden roses, sweet lavender, billowy hydrangea, and fragrant gardenias. Certainly “atypical now in a neighborhood of easy-care lawns and drought-resistant shrubs,” in LA, but consistent with her palette of pale pinks, pastel blues, and white and her feeling of sanctuary. And she believes we can all benefit by bringing in the feminine, soft, and romantic by way of flowers. “Flowers enrich my soul and inspire my sense of beauty.”

Here are Rachel Ashwell’s tips for creating, placing, and enjoying a romantic floral arrangement.

Finding the right floral vase

romantic florals with flower arrangements by Rachel Ashwell

There is no “right” way to pair a vase with an arrangement, Ashwell says. But she does believe the beauty of the vase is an essential feature of the result. “The vase is the starting point, whether it’s a jam jar or ornate vintage vase, there’s no judgment. It just has to be lovely.”

Ashwell scours flea markets and thrift stores all over the world, and online marketplaces for her vases and says not to be afraid to repurpose something old or unique. “In a thrift store, you might find a teapot without a lid for $5, so long as it doesn’t leak.” If you find an older vase with cracks, you can always insert a glass liner. The main thing is to think outside of the box (or vase) and have confidence.

Romantic floral arrangement tips

Once the vase is chosen, Ashwell relies on her intuition to arrange it.

“I’m a flower plopper,” she says, meaning she truly plops the flowers into the vase. “When flowers come into my life, even a $10 bouquet from the supermarket or free from the alleyway [this is a very typical thing in LA to go into an alleyway and pick branches, blooms or citrus from trees that overhang into the alleyway], plopping enables me to be more spontaneous.”

Before the plopping begins, she tends to remove the green leaves, especially with roses, so the look is focused on the blooms. “I’m all about the heads of the roses,” Ashwell says. “For the most part I cut the leaves all the way down, so just the heads or buds are exposed.”

romantic florals with purple and white flowers

Where to place a floral arrangement

Ashwell then studies the space and finds the right place for her arrangements. If you’re having a dinner party, Ashwell says “You don’t need a three-foot vase on a dining room table. I prefer to do clusters. I love nothing more than six little vases on a dinner table, then everyone gets to take one home.”

She also suggests placing flowers where you wouldn’t usually, like a stairwell or hallway that doesn’t get any love or attention. She likes flowers where she spends a lot of time, by her desk or on a windowsill above the kitchen sink. “Flowers have their personalities. A beautiful arrangement can fit in anywhere.” Ashwell often places an arrangement by her makeup mirror in her bathroom too.

romantic florals with Rachel Ashwell floral arrangement

How to choose a floral color palette

Her florals naturally flow into her color scheme of pastels and pinks. “It might sound kind of wacky,” says the Shabby Chic® creator, “but I don’t pay too much attention to the palette around me.” Sometimes she brings in yellow roses but avoids bright, bright red. “For me, it’s too startling.” She says the main point is to focus on the beauty of the flowers and the vase selection.

romantic florals with Rachel Ashwell holding jug of flowers

Feel free to rearrange the arrangement

Ashwell is a fan of rearranging an arrangement to suit your taste. “Sometimes it’s perfect and you love it the way it is, other times you might want to tweak it till you absolutely adore it,” she says. “I tend to loosen up arrangements. I trim a lot of the green stems and leaves off. I like more air in the vase.” You can also end up with two or three displays out of one bouquet.

Best flowers for a romantic floral arrangement

Ashwell doesn’t consider herself a flower snob. “I go to the supermarket, I grab things, I love carnations — white and pink, but not red,” she says. She also loves peonies, hydrangeas, lisianthus, ranunculus, and roses as part of the Shabby Chic® aesthetic. “Sweet peas that are fleeting lovely things, and lilacs when they are around.”

The optimism of nature

A compelling reason to immerse oneself in florals is something the eye cannot see, but the heart can feel, according to Ashwell. At a time when so many of us are feeling stuck in a state of world-weariness, bringing nature inside is vital, she says.

“It’s just a reminder this too shall pass. Nature is the biggest teacher of that. We embrace the beauty when it’s in bloom, acceptance on its way out, and patience when it’s dormant. Above all, nature is hopeful.”

Single on Valentine’s Day? You’ve Got This with You-based Ideas

single on valentines day with roses on a chair

Way back when, Valentine’s Day was a public test of your partner’s love. (And way, way back when, it was an elementary school popularity contest, with construction paper valentines being passed out in class, a visible tally of secret admirers.)

Then, for most adults, “public” became largely about the workplace. Delivery messengers (remember them?) would parade arrangements of flowers past receptionists (remember them?) and secretaries (remember them?) to land the floral trophies on the desks of hopeful wives, girlfriends, and, on the rare occasion, friends. Guys never got the goods, despite the fact that they were boyfriends, husbands, and lovers who also like Valentine’s Day flowers.

Usually, I wasn’t lucky enough to receive a showy outpouring of affection on Valentine’s Day. Though one year, my hunky trainer boyfriend took the whole display thing to another level by personally delivering a couple of dozen roses to me when I worked at Allure magazine.

Boyfriends of Valentine’s past

I’ve racked up a few other “good” Valentine’s days over my five decades of singledom. There was a beautiful dinner at La Tulipe in New York City; a couple of years ago, my boyfriend flew across the country to visit, which included Valentine’s dinner in Venice, California.

Back in the ’80s, the hunky trainer once cleared all the furniture out of his bedroom, set up a table for two, and served me dinner there, with the lights of New Jersey twinkling beneath his 18th-floor window. (I know, I too wish he had stuck around.)

I’ve also had some disasters, of course. I have spent many V-Days alone before “alone” was as common as it is now. One especially soul-crushing Feb. 14 I went to an exercise class before skipping dinner to watch “Ozark.”

single on valentines day with woman smelling flowers

3 tips for a Valentine’s Day makeover if you’re single

So, as the often baggage-laden occasion approaches this year, I’ve realized it’s time to drop the suitcases.

Few of us go to the office as often as we once did; some no longer go at all. And relationships are more complex and inclusive. Who, when, and why we love has largely escaped the ancient social constraints; that in itself is cause for celebration.

As we’ve revamped our lives and loves, perhaps we can, and should, revamp this holiday. Here are three ways to do it.

1. Look for love in unexpected places

The first key to fulfillment is realizing this day is not just about romantic love but about love in all its glorious, irrepressible manifestations.

My mother used to make paper-thin sugar cookies cut into hearts, sprinkled with pink crystals (much like these!), and ship them to me individually wrapped in wax paper inside a tin. That’s love as true, or truer, than any other. We used to hold our annual Naked Angels Theatre Group benefit on Valentine’s Day in New York just for the purpose of being together with a couple of hundred friends.

I once had a special dinner with three girlfriends in LA during which we cooked and drank wine and ate chocolate. That was heaven.

2. Practice self-care and give self-love presents

Take responsibility for our own happiness and love on that day. Ensure pleasure, not disappointment. Why wait for someone else to send us flowers? Now I keep my bungalow stocked with fresh farmers market petals year-round. At the holidays, we gave our team leader a monthly subscription to flower delivery. Why not do that for ourselves?

Self-love is anything that makes you feel content, appreciated, and loved, originated by you. Examples include reaching out to a dear friend, getting a massage (yes, by a professional you don’t know), or taking a gratitude walk by the ocean or lake. After all, healthy, loving relationships start with ourselves, right? So, let’s show our precious selves some love and splurge on what we desire. That could be decadent chocolates or delicious pears or decorated cookies or ruby red roses, or even the valentines you never received growing up.

3. Be the giver

A final strategy: Always be the giver. Make someone else’s Valentine’s Day by inviting them to dinner, mailing them a card (remember that?), or sending them a special delivery. Two years ago a couple of friends (who are a couple) dropped off flowers early to their single pal (me). I felt amazing, and so did they. (I later had a blind brunch date, which was completely uninspired, but that’s not the point here.) The act of giving can make you feel loving, loved, and valued, and isn’t that what we all wish for on this sometimes thorny day?

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