Making a Flower Press
I was saving this one for a little later in the season but inspired by our friends at erdhummel_naturgarten it’s happening now. I really missed having a proper flower press last year and chose to use big heavy books around the house with some lining paper, but quickly found the books I’d used were books I wanted to… use! So earlier this year we made our flower press out of scraps around the house and some trusty sticky glue.
Here’s a little nudge to get something more than a heavy book into your house to press your flowers before all the spring and summer flowers come out to play.
Materials Needed:
Plywood/wood off cuts/heavy cardboard
Jigsaw/saw (or scissors/Stanley knife if using cardboard)
A drill/hole punch
4 x bolts
4 x wingnuts
or if you’re using heavy cardboard you don’t necessarily need the holes but could use elastic bands or material scraps/string to hold it all together
Newspaper or other absorbent paper slightly smaller than your frame. Printer paper doesn’t work so well for this. Lining paper in the wallpaper section is good for this, as is watercolour paper, but it’s a little more expensive.
Cardboard scraps slightly smaller than your frame
Optional
Wildlife or gardening magazines - to find pictures of flowers
Sticky glue
Scissors
Pens/paint/crayons etc
Top tips for pressing flowers
First be sure that the flowers you’re collecting aren’t toxic or protected. Check this document of protected flowers and do your research first if you’re not sure.
Collect on a dry day when they’re free from rain drops or dew. Droplets can cause blemishes on your flowers
Leave your flowers with a little room to breathe for 24hrs before closing the flower press tight. It gives the petals chance to settle.
Thicker flowers will need you to change the paper around them a few times. They’re full of water, which left could leave you with mouldy flowers.
Be sure to space out your finds so they don’t overlap.