A Rose by Any Other Name



WRITER CREDIT: 
PHOTOGRAPHER CREDIT: 
A Rose by Any Other Name | Add Lowcountry flavor to your wedding florals with handmade, everlasting palmetto roses

If you live in Charleston, ever visited (or even just Google our fair town) more than likely you’ve heard of or seen a palmetto rose. For the still uninitiated, the handmade creations are twisted, woven fronds made from the palmettos that dot the city’s landscape. And while sweetgrass basket sewers (downtown at the City Market and Broad Street post office, and on Highway 17 in Mount Pleasant) sell them among their wares, making and plying the concoctions tend to be the realm of local boys looking to garner pocket money.

 

But ask anyone where the craft got its start and you’ll get a mess of answers, some claiming Confederate soldiers’ sweethearts made them for their menfolk to wear boutonniere-style into war; others declaring that in the early 20th century local prisoners made them to pass the hours; and even more saying that they are easy origami that anyone crafty growing up around palms eventually sorts out. The latter might be the most probable, as variations on the flower pop up throughout Caribbean islands, and Southern Europeans in  tropical climes have long made them for Palm Sunday.

 

Regardless of origin, palmetto roses hold a store of possibilities for area weddings. Florist Clara Gonzales of Tiger Lily often works them into arrangements and bouquets at the behest of brides, and says, “palmettos roses are a great addition for outdoor ceremonies in the summer since they won’t wilt in the heat.” Sara of Sara York Grimshaw Designs agrees, and loves their versatility. “Massed in a vase with no other flowers or fillers makes for a beautiful, long-lasting centerpiece,” she says. “And while they work with any fresh flower combination,” she continues, “I think they’re most appropriate with Southern blooms like camellias, garden roses, and hydrangeas.”

 

Horst Wholesale Florist’s go-to palmetto rose queen is Lisa Ferguson, and while she has made them into favors, boutonnieres,  and posies for mothers and bridesmaids, her favorite configuration is a wreath. “Those are perfect for church doors,” she says, “and you can use them long after.”

A forever flower? Sounds like the perfect wedding memento.

The Wedding Row

December 20 2018
Although Heather and Peter grew up in the same town in New Jersey, they didn’t officially meet until he noticed her wearing a Ridge High School lacrosse sweatshirt at a Lafayette College fraternity...

December 19 2018
High school romances can be so very, very awkward. Take Chapin, South Carolina, natives Lindsay and Tyler, for example. “He claims he charmed me when I fell up the stairs to our Spanish class and he...

December 18 2018
Charleston residents Ross and Chase met online back in 2014, got engaged in 2016, and invited one and all—Ross is one of 30 grandchildren—to their seriously wonderful wedding in 2018. Family...

December 17 2018
While the event maestro Kim Newton orchestrates plenty of weddings in her own neck of the woods (that’s Alexandria, Virginia), she also has clients who say “I do” here in Charleston. While on one...

December 14 2018
Happy Friday, brides! Do you remember these two? To trigger your memory, here’s a link to when we posted Sara and Colin ’cycle-centric engagement photos by shutterbugs Aaron and Jillian. Well, now it...

December 13 2018
You know we’d only share a gorgeous wedding with you. So we’ll pause on the descriptors of this couple’s Big Day for a moment and tell you a little about the pair themselves, because when...

December 12 2018
You know about “designated travel companions,” right? It’s when someone who works for an airline gets to pick a “buddy” who can travel at the same nominal fees (we’re talking taxes and regulatory...

December 11 2018
Today’s couple hit it off one night at a Baltimore bar. Credit for the first move goes to Olivia, who made her intentions mighty clear on her way out by hip-checking another girl out of the way so...