Drying Your Own Flowers
You can save vast sums of money on dried flowers and vines if you choose to dry your own. Nearly anywhere that you purchase them, due to how many flowers it takes to make an arrangement as well as how long they take to dry, they will be quite costly,and can be dried yourself for about a fifth of what it will cost you to purchase a nice arrangement or a bouquet of dried florals.
Dried flowers are useful in arrangements and for bath salts, soaps
as well as to use in many other craft items.
Dried flowers can be achieve not only from what you have grown yourself, but also from what you may find on a nature walk, in your backyard or along a roadway. Queen annes lace, buttercups, wild sunflowers all dry nicely to make lovely arrangements.

To Dry Your Own
Pick your flowers in dry weather. Preferably you will pick them
after 11 am, when the dew has evaporated from the ground, and nucn
them into small bouquests, protected from dust by covering them
with a sheet of paper.
HANG FLORALS
To preserve their bright colors, hang flowers in a dry well
ventilated area, with very little light, such as an attic, garage
or a closet. Too much light will cause discoloration of the
flowers, fading them
HERB HANGING
Herbs which will be used for cooking, should not be hung upside
down, as this will deplete their essential oils. Instead, use paper
towels or a wire screen to dry them, or, it can be done quite
effectively in the microwave on low power, using paper towels below
them.

PREVENTING PETAL DROP
To prevent your flowers from losing their petals while drying, pick
them before they are fully opened up, and leave a sufficient amount
of space between the hanging bouquets, or about six inches.
You can replace brittle stems with bits of metal florist wire,
while the flower is still fresh.
Thread a length of wire through the stem and bloom of brittle
flowers such as straw flowers, while they are fresh. Bend a small
hook at the end and pull the wire down into the bloom to conceal
it.
LEAVES
You can stabilize the colors of leaves by ironing them with a
moderately hot iron. The larger ones can be ironed directly, such
as maple and oak, while smaller more delicate ones can be ironed
between the pages of newsprint .
The heat will set and stablize the colors even if you don’t iron
them or dip them into wax
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