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12 Mixed Roses In A Bunch

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$40.00
$35.00
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You don't know which colour she'd prefer. Red feels too loaded. Pink feels like a guess. White feels safe but cold. Meanwhile the birthday is tomorrow and you're still on the product page. Twelve mixed roses solves that problem. Five colours in one bunch — red, orange, yellow, white, and pink — covering every mood at once. A Japanese designer ordered these for his wife's anniversary dinner at a Seminyak restaurant last month. She spent the whole meal convinced a friend back in Tokyo had organised it. He did it himself from his phone in twenty minutes. $35 USD, same day delivery across Bali. Order now.

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Description

Twelve roses in five colours. Red, deep orange, yellow, white, and pink, hand-tied with foliage and presented as a bunch. No vase. No box. No wrap beyond what holds the stems together. The colour is right there in your hands the moment it arrives, and whoever receives it gets to choose the vessel themselves. Twenty-first most popular product across all of Bali over the last twelve months.

$35.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Kuta, Jimbaran and Nusa Dua. Five rose colours, hand-tied bunch with foliage.

What Arrives

The bunch arrives as twelve roses: two to three stems of each colour, distributed through the bunch so no single colour dominates. Red sits opposite yellow. Orange sits next to white. Pink threads between them. The foliage is simple and dark-leafed, filling the spaces between stems without competing with the colour. The flowers are at mixed opening stages. Some are still forming. Some are half open. The reds tend to arrive more advanced than the yellows, which is normal given how the different varieties hold during conditioning. By day three they are all open and the bunch looks fuller and more saturated than on day one.

This is a bunch, not an arrangement in a pot or vase. The stems are the full length, around thirty-five to forty centimetres. The recipient can place them directly into any vase they have on hand, or if this is a resort or villa delivery, Kadek will bring the flowers in and the room attendant or concierge usually sorts a vessel. Hotels almost always have vases. Villas usually have something. If you want the flowers to arrive in a vase ready to display, the Bali Mixed Rose Bunch at $45 comes arranged in a charcoal vase and has nearly triple the stem count.

Why Five Colours at This Price

Twelve red roses cost $38. Twelve pink roses cost $38. This product costs $35 for twelve roses in five colours. The difference is not quality. It is selection logic.

A single-colour bunch requires twelve roses that match. Same opening stage. Same head size. Same depth of colour. If the market has twenty-two red roses worth buying on a given morning, Kadek takes twelve of the best twenty-two. The four that are slightly smaller or half a day behind get left. For a mixed bunch, the standard shifts. The mix is the feature. Three reds from one corner of the market, two yellows from another grower, three whites that might be slightly smaller than ideal for a mono bouquet but disappear beautifully next to a deep orange. The variety context absorbs variation that a uniform bunch would expose. Different growers, slightly different stem lengths, slightly different opening stages. In a single-colour bunch that unevenness would be visible. In this bunch it reads as natural, garden-gathered texture. That's where the $3 difference lives. Not in the flowers. In what you need the flowers to be.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

Something most people don't notice until it's pointed out to them: the different rose colours in this bunch open at different times because they're different genetic varieties, not just different colours on the same plant. The red in this bunch is a variety that opens faster than the yellow. The yellow holds tighter for two to three days longer than the white. The orange sits somewhere between them. So a bunch that looks like five colours on day one looks like five colours in completely different proportions by day five. The reds are relaxed and wide. The yellows are still forming, still upright. The whites have softened. The orange is somewhere in the middle. That staggered opening means this bunch is actively changing while it's in the room. I find people come back to notice it daily in a way they don't with a single-colour bunch, which opens more or less uniformly and then finishes more or less uniformly. The mixed bunch has a longer visual story.

Last Month at Metis

Kenji is a product designer from Tokyo who has been coming to Bali every March for the last seven years with his wife Naomi. They always book a week at the same villa complex in Kerobokan. This year he called the shop. An actual phone call, not a message. two days before flying in. His Bahasa is limited and my Japanese is nonexistent but we managed perfectly well between his English and mine. He wanted flowers for a dinner at Metis on Jl. Petitenget. Not delivered to the villa. Delivered to the restaurant, before the table was set, for their twelfth wedding anniversary.

I called Metis directly to arrange it with the front-of-house team. They were completely familiar with the process. Metis gets flower deliveries regularly for occasions, and the staff placed the bunch in one of their tall glass cylinders and had it at the table when Naomi and Kenji arrived. Kenji sent me a photograph the following morning. Naomi is smiling and holding the bunch still in its cylinder. In the photo the orange and yellow are doing most of the visual work against the restaurant's warm evening light. The reds are almost dark by comparison. He said she asked four times over dinner who had organised it because she thought one of her friends in Tokyo must have coordinated something from home. He confirmed he did it himself. She apparently found that more impressive than the flowers.

For hotel anniversary deliveries across Bali including Legian, Seminyak, and Berawa, Kadek coordinates with concierge teams directly. Include the guest name, property name, and preferred time in your order notes and we handle the rest.

The Caller From Edinburgh

She messaged me on Instagram, which is not the usual channel but it works. A Scottish woman named Claire, organising her sister's birthday from Edinburgh. Her sister was at an Airbnb in Canggu with a group of friends for a bachelorette week. Claire wanted flowers delivered the morning of her sister's birthday, which happened to fall on the Tuesday of the trip.

She had the 12 Red Roses in her cart. She messaged to ask whether red was "too romantic for a birthday from a sister." I told her that depends entirely on the sister. She said her sister was someone who "likes a lot going on." Mixed roses. Immediately obvious. She switched within two minutes and asked if I could include a card that said "Wishing you were here but also glad I'm not because you're probably having too much fun." I wrote it exactly as she sent it. Kadek delivered at 8:15am to the Airbnb in Canggu and the sister opened the door still in pyjamas. Claire had told me in advance that the group would be awake early because they had a sunrise yoga session booked. She was right.

Ay Ayu Running Sunny Florist Bali since 2013

This product was not planned. When I opened the shop in 2013, everything in the collection was single-colour. One morning in that first year, a man walked in without having looked at the website at all. He pointed at the bucket of stems I had on the bench from the morning market and said he wanted those. All of them, mixed together, whatever colours were there. I tried to sell him a proper arrangement. He was not interested. He wanted the bucket. I tied what I had: three reds, two yellows, two whites, two oranges, three pinks. He came back the next week. And the week after. By the end of that year he had ordered eleven times. He was a French chef working at a resort in Nusa Dua and the flowers went to a woman who worked at the concierge desk. I do not know how the story ended. But that man is why this product exists. Twelve roses, five colours, no plan. It sold itself.

Who Orders This

People who cannot commit to a single colour but are not confused. They are confident that variety is the right call. Partners sending birthday flowers to someone whose tastes they know well enough to know she likes things bright. International senders from Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan, and Europe who want flowers that photograph well in a villa or hotel room. Bachelorette group deliveries to villas in Pererenan and Canggu. Restaurant and bar deliveries where a single colour would be predictable and five colours are not. Daughters sending to mothers on Bali holidays. Anyone whose recipient "likes a lot going on," to borrow Claire's description.

For the version with three times the rose count in a dark charcoal vase at $45, see the Bali Mixed Rose Bunch. For mixed colours with calla lilies at the same $45, see the 12 Mixed Roses and 3 Calla Lilies. For a single-colour alternative, the 12 Red Roses or 12 Pink Roses are both $38. Browse the full rose collection or see every bouquet in the bunch range.

Care

Trim all stems at a diagonal and place in a clean vase with fresh water. A tall vase works better than a wide one for this bunch. The stems are long and the bouquet holds its shape more easily with support around the lower half. Change the water on day three and retrim the stems at that point. Strip every leaf that sits below the waterline before placing. Submerged leaves rot quickly, and the rot breeds bacteria that clogs the stem from below. Roses in this condition last two to three days less than they should. Strip them.

The reds and oranges will loosen before the yellows and whites. This is normal. As the warmer colours open wide, the cooler ones are still forming. By day four or five the bunch looks very different from day one and some people find that surprising. The roses are not dying. The later openers are reaching their best. Remove any single rose that has finished and the remaining stems will spread to fill the space. Keep away from direct sun, air conditioning vents blowing directly onto the flowers, and fruit bowls. Ethylene from ripening fruit accelerates petal drop in roses faster than almost anything else.

Delivery

Same day delivery across all of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. For restaurant deliveries include the venue name, reservation name, and a preferred arrival time in your order notes. Kadek coordinates with the restaurant directly. For resort and hotel deliveries, include the guest name and property. Delivery to Tanah Lot, Gianyar, Tabanan, Uluwatu, and Pecatu. Seven days a week including public holidays. Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.

Twelve Roses, Five Colours, $35

Most people buying this product have already ruled out single-colour roses and know exactly why. They want variety. They want something that looks like more than one decision was made. And they want it at a price that does not require justification. Thirty-five dollars gets twelve roses in five colours, delivered same day anywhere in Bali, with a card message and direct coordination with restaurants or hotel concierge teams if that is where they're going. It is the twenty-first most popular product in the collection. Not because it is a compromise. Because for the right occasion and the right recipient, five colours is the only answer and twelve roses is plenty to make them count.

Order now. Same day delivery across Bali, seven days a week.

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