Same Day Flower Delivery To All Locations In Bali

12 Mixed Roses And 3 Calla Lilies

Same Day Delivery
$45.00
+

Twelve roses in four colours and three white calla lilies. Red, yellow, orange, and hot pink with the smooth white trumpets of the callas rising between them. The bouquet that says "happy birthday" without saying anything else. Fourteenth across all of Bali, with thirty percent going to resort hotels and a strong flow to restaurants like Ku De Ta and Fins for birthday lunches. The calla lilies are the detail that stops it looking random and starts it looking designed. Four colours. Three white pauses. One bouquet that works for every relationship and every occasion that is not romantic. $45, same day delivery, anywhere in Bali. Order now.

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Description

Twelve roses in four colours and three white calla lilies. Red, yellow, orange, and hot pink roses sit together with the smooth white trumpets of the callas rising between them. The product photo shows the bouquet in a glass vase for display. What arrives is a hand-tied bunch without a vase. Our fourteenth most popular product across all of Bali, with at least thirty percent of orders going to resort hotels including the Legian Beach Hotel, and a significant share delivered to restaurants like Ku De Ta and Fins for birthday lunches.

$45.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Canggu, Ubud, Seminyak, Kuta, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Mixed colour roses and calla lilies, hand-tied bunch.

What Arrives

Fifteen flowers total. Twelve roses spread across four colours: deep red, bright yellow, warm orange, and hot pink. Three white calla lilies with their smooth curved spathes sitting taller than the roses. Green foliage fills the spaces between stems. The bouquet is hand-tied and delivered as a wrapped bunch. No vase included.

The roses are at various stages of openness. Some are still cupped tight with spiral centres visible. Others have relaxed further, showing layers of petals. Each colour holds three roses, giving the bouquet a balanced distribution rather than one colour dominating. The callas stand above the rose line because their stems are longer and their blooms are naturally taller. From the front, the three white trumpets punctuate the colour mix the way spaces punctuate a sentence. They give the eye somewhere to rest between the red and the yellow and the orange and the pink.

Why Mixed Colour Roses Work Differently With Callas

We sell a white version of this product at the same $45 price. Twelve white roses and three white calla lilies. The white version ranks eleventh. This mixed version ranks fourteenth. Three ranking positions apart at the same price with the same stem count.

The white version wins on versatility. All-white flowers serve romance, sympathy, celebration, congratulations, and apology. The colour says nothing, which means the card says everything. Senders who are unsure of the right tone default to white because it cannot be wrong.

This mixed version does the opposite. It announces itself. Four rose colours in one bunch is not subtle and it is not trying to be. The message is celebration, colour, energy, presence. This product does not work for sympathy. It does not work for a quiet anniversary between a couple who prefer understatement. It works for birthdays, congratulations, welcome-to-Bali surprises, and occasions where the sender wants the flowers to generate a reaction the moment the paper comes off.

The white callas serve a completely different role here than they do in the white bouquet. In the white version, the callas add texture contrast to a single-colour palette. In the mixed version, the callas act as a visual bridge. Four different rose colours sitting next to each other can look chaotic. Red beside yellow beside pink beside orange is a lot of information for the eye. The three white callas break the colour field into sections. They create pauses between the warm tones. Without the callas, this would be twelve roses fighting for attention. With the callas, the eye moves from colour to white to colour to white and the arrangement reads as designed rather than random.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

People think mixed colour roses are just "whatever the florist had in stock." That complaint has followed mixed bouquets for decades. It is the reason some people avoid them. I heard it from a customer in my second year. She said "I do not want it to look like you grabbed leftovers from the bucket." That stuck with me. The solution is in the ratio. Three of each colour, evenly distributed. Not five red and one yellow and four orange and two pink. Three, three, three, three. Equal weight to every colour. Then the callas go in as the neutral element, three white trumpets spaced evenly through the roses. When the ratios are balanced, the bouquet reads as intentional. When they are unbalanced, it reads as random. That distinction is the difference between a mixed bouquet that somebody chose and a mixed bouquet that somebody assembled from whatever was available. I check the ratio before tying every single one of these. If a colour is short by even one stem, I swap a rose from the next batch rather than send an uneven product.

Thirty Percent to Resorts

Nearly one in three orders for this product goes to a resort hotel. The Legian Beach Hotel on Jl. Melasti is the most frequent single destination. It is a five-star beachfront property with large rooms, ocean views, and the kind of guests who receive flowers from partners and family overseas. The flowers arrive at the front desk and the staff walk them to the room.

Why this product over red roses for resort deliveries? Because the sender often does not know the relationship context well enough to commit to a single colour. When a man in Sydney sends twelve red roses to a woman at the Legian Beach Hotel, the implication is romantic. When a daughter in Perth sends the same red roses to her mother at the same hotel for her birthday, the message lands wrong. Mixed colours solve this. Red, yellow, orange, and pink together do not carry romantic weight. They carry warmth. The sender does not have to worry about how the colour will be interpreted because multiple colours cancel each other's individual signals. The callas add a layer of quality that keeps the bouquet from reading as generic. It is a specific product with a specific look, not a grab-bag of leftover stems.

The resorts in Legian, Nusa Dua, and along the Benoa peninsula generate a reliable flow of orders for this product because the occasion profile matches: birthdays, welcome-to-Bali surprises, thank-you gifts from conference organisers, and celebration milestones sent by people who want colour without committing to a romantic declaration.

Birthday Lunches at Ku De Ta and Fins

Ku De Ta sits on the Seminyak beachfront and has been one of Bali's most photographed venues since it opened. Birthday lunches there tend to be group affairs: eight to fifteen people at a long table with ocean views, champagne, and a booking made weeks in advance. The person organising the lunch calls or WhatsApps me to arrange delivery for a specific time. The flowers go to the restaurant before the guest of honour arrives. Staff place them on the table. When the birthday person walks in, the bouquet is already sitting where their plate will be.

Fins in Canggu draws a different crowd. Surf-adjacent, casual, brunch turning into long lunch. Birthday deliveries to Fins tend to arrive mid-meal as a surprise rather than being pre-placed on the table. Kadek walks in with the bouquet and hands it directly to the birthday person while friends photograph the moment on their phones. The bright colours photograph well against Fins' neutral interior. Red and yellow and orange and pink against a light wood table catches every phone camera in the group.

Ay Ayu Sunny Florist Bali, since 2013

A woman in Melbourne WhatsApped me on a Tuesday morning with a screenshot of a restaurant reservation at Ku De Ta. Her best friend was turning thirty in Bali and she had organised a surprise lunch with ten of their friends. She wanted flowers on the table when they arrived. I asked what kind. She said "something that looks like a birthday, not like a funeral and not like a Valentine." I showed her this product and the Bali Bright Bunch and she picked this one because she said the calla lilies made it "look more grown-up." She was twenty-nine. Her friend was turning thirty. The callas were the detail that tipped the choice because they made the colour feel intentional rather than young. She asked me to deliver at 11:45, fifteen minutes before the reservation. I called Ku De Ta directly to confirm a staff member would place them. Birthday woman walked in, saw the flowers, burst into tears, and the entire table cheered. The woman in Melbourne told me afterward that three of the ten friends at the table asked where the flowers came from and two of them ordered from us within the following month.

How This Product Came Together

I added mixed roses to the range in 2014 when I realised the collection was missing a product for people who wanted colour but not commitment to a single shade. Everything I sold at that point was mono-colour. Red roses, pink roses, white roses, or tropical arrangements. A customer looking for a birthday gift had to choose a colour that said something specific about the relationship. Mixed colour roses say something general: "I am celebrating you." The calla lilies came into the mix when I noticed that mixed roses on their own looked flat in photographs. Every rose is roughly the same shape and size. Four colours of the same flower creates variety in hue but not in form. The callas added the height difference and the shape contrast that the roses could not provide on their own. The product has stayed in the top fifteen since 2015.

Who Orders This

Birthday senders. Friends ordering to restaurants, beach clubs, and cafes where the flowers will sit on a table in front of a group. Family members sending to hotel rooms at the Legian Beach Hotel, Nusa Dua resorts, and Jimbaran properties. International senders from Australia and Singapore who want colour without romantic implication. Conference organisers sending welcome flowers to speaker rooms. Valentine's Day and anniversary senders who want variety over volume. People delivering to villas in Kerobokan, Berawa, Umalas, and Sanur for non-romantic celebrations. Anyone who scrolled past the red roses and the pink roses and thought "I want flowers that look happy, not flowers that make a statement."

For the all-white version at the same price, see the 12 White Roses + 3 Calla Lilies. For a mixed bouquet without calla lilies, see the Bali Bright Bunch at $45. For the full bouquet collection, browse all hand-tied bunches. For arrangements in pots, see the arrangement range.

Care

Unwrap the bouquet and trim all stems at a diagonal. Place in a wide vase with fresh water. The calla stems are thicker and fleshier than the rose stems. Both flower types drink at different rates. The roses will consume water faster. Top up daily. Change the water completely on day three and re-trim all stems. The callas will outlast the roses by three to four days. When the roses begin to fade around day five or six, remove them. The three calla lilies will continue standing on their own in the vase for several more days. Strip any foliage below the waterline. Keep away from direct sunlight and fruit bowls.

Delivery

Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. For restaurant deliveries, include the venue name, reservation name, and preferred delivery time in your order notes and we coordinate with staff. Delivery to Tabanan, Gianyar, Pecatu, and everywhere in between. Seven days a week. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.

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