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Top Tips for Arranging Mums

Erin Benzakein invites us to her Washington farm brimming with fields of chrysanthemums and shares tips for arranging the fall staple
Erin Benzakein working on arrangement of blush and pale yellow mums and fall flowers

Photo by Joy Prouty

Erin Benzakein and her family have an organic flower farm in Washington’s Skagit Valley, and as a farmer-florist, she is extraordinarily particular about the flowers she grows. Looking for more fall options, she was delighted to discover the amazing choices in the chrysanthemum family.

But don’t mistake her flowers for your run-of-the-mill garden mums. She’s enamored with varieties of chrysanthemums that lend themselves to surprise, flowers so elegant and aesthetically unusual that they beg a closer look. “The varieties that we’re growing for cut flowers can be several feet tall,” she says. “They have this rainbow of color, and then there’s the shapes—the fluted petals, the big quilly ones, the spiders. No one would guess that they’re chrysanthemums.”

Autumn arrangement of chrysanthemums in orange and rust colors

Photo by Joy Prouty

Autumnal colors come alive in Erin Benzakein's arrangement with golden and orange chrysanthemums including 'Bronze Fleece' and 'George Couchman.'

chrysanthemum arrangement with spidery petals is dotted with light-pink puffs of ‘Peter Magnus’ and anchored with fuller blooms of ‘Norton Vic’

Photo by Joy Prouty

Erin Benzakien's cheerful chrysanthemum design with spidery petals is dotted with light-pink puffs of ‘Peter Magnus’ and anchored with fuller blooms of ‘Norton Vic.’

Yellow to red ombre collection of mum flowers on weathered wood table

Photo by Joy Prouty

As seen in this ombre grouping of mums, varieties—even in the same color family—can differ in petal size, shape, and texture.

pink, spider mums, 'Fleur de lis'

Photo by Joy Prouty

"I'm completely obsessed with all of the spider types," says Benzakein. "Their giant flower heads and exotic, thin, needlelike petals are absolutely mesmerizing. They look amazing in a bouquet or on their own in a vase." Here, the blossoms of pink 'Fleur de Lis' mums prove the point.

Orange flowers of Chrysanthemum 'Bronze Fleece'

Photo by Joy Prouty

Chrysanthemum 'Bronze Fleece'

masses of 'Myss Goldie' and 'Peter Magnus' chrysanthemums

Photo by Joy Prouty

Lovely masses of 'Myss Goldie' and 'Peter Magnus' chrysanthemums bask in the afternoon light.

ERIN’S TIPS FOR ARRANGING MUMS

CUT THE FLOWERS when they are half to two-thirds of the way open, and then remove any foliage that will fall below the water line in a vase.

INSPECT THE PETALS for damage or hidden bugs and remove them.

PAIR MUMS with other late-season garden materials such as fall leaves, crabapples on the branch, ornamental cabbage, dried grains, and dahlias.

EXPECT MUMS TO LAST a long time in the vase, often more than two weeks. Add floral preservative to the water to help the cut blooms retain their vibrant coloring and also extend the vase life even longer.

By Julie Cole Miller | Photos by Joy Prouty

Pink patterned chairs sit across a white couch in a neutral room.

MUM’S THE WORD

For farmer and florist Erin Benzakein of Floret Flowers in Washington, elegant varieties of chrysanthemums are stealing fall’s show. See more mums at Floret farm!

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