Same Day Flower Delivery To All Locations In Bali

12 Mixed Roses In A Pot

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$45.00
$40.00
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You want flowers at the villa but you need a vase too, except you do not know if there is a vase, and finding one in a Bali rental feels like a lot. The 12 Mixed Roses In A Pot solve that. Terracotta, five colours, already arranged. Set it down and it is done. We put one on a lunch table in Sanur last month for a Dutch birthday. The birthday woman picked the pot up, put it down, picked it up again. Her husband said she flew it home to Amsterdam. $40. Order now.

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Description

Twelve roses arranged in a terracotta garden pot. Hot pink, orange-coral, yellow, white, and deep pink blooms rising above the rim with green foliage threaded through the base. No vase. No wrapping. Nothing to unwrap, nothing to find a container for. The pot is the container. Set it down and you are done. Fifty-first most popular across all of Bali.

$40.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali areas including Sanur, Canggu, Ubud, Kuta, Jimbaran and Seminyak. Twelve mixed-colour roses in terracotta pot, five colours, green foliage throughout.

What Arrives

Twelve roses in five colours: hot pink, orange-coral, yellow, white, and a deeper dusty pink. The blooms are at different stages, some fully open with layered petals visible, some still in a tight half-spiral. This is intentional. When every rose opens to the same width on the same day, the arrangement reads as artificial. Mixed opening stages give it the quality of something freshly gathered rather than factory-built.

The pot is unglazed terracotta. Orange-brown clay, rounded rim, slightly wider at the top than at the base. Classic garden pot shape. The roses are arranged in floral foam inside the pot, rising four to six inches above the rim, with green foliage threaded between stems at the base. The foliage covers the rim and the top of the foam so that what you see is flowers sitting in what looks like a planted garden arrangement. There is no visible mechanics. Just colour coming out of clay.

No ribbon. No kraft paper. No tissue. The delivery is the display.

Why a Pot Changes How Roses Read in a Room

A vase of roses says: flowers arrived. A pot of roses says: flowers live here.

These are not the same message. Cut flowers in a vase carry an obvious temporariness. The glass, the water line, the stems visible through the side of the container. All of it tells anyone looking that this arrangement has a counted number of days. That is not necessarily a problem. But for certain settings, that impermanence changes the emotional register of the gift.

The terracotta pot removes those signals. The clay is opaque. The foam is hidden. The foliage covers the working parts. What remains is an arrangement that reads as a living thing. Guests at villas look twice. Hotel room attendants place it differently, closer to the window, near the bedside, as though it needs care. It is a small perceptual shift but it changes how the recipient relates to the flowers from the moment they see them.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

I started making pot arrangements because of villas. Bali has thousands of private villa rentals. The guests staying in them often want flowers that look like they belong to the property. A glass vase of cut flowers looks like something a florist delivered. A terracotta pot of roses looks like the villa owner put it there. The terracotta pot is part of the Balinese aesthetic. It matches the stone, the teak, the outdoor showers, the garden that comes right up to the living room wall. When I deliver this to a Umalas villa or a cliff-top property in Uluwatu, it lands differently from anything wrapped in paper. It fits the setting. Guests comment on the arrangement. They also comment on the pot. It triggers a different kind of appreciation. One guest messaged me three days after delivery to say she had brought the pot home on the plane because she wanted to plant something in it. The flowers were gone but the pot was staying.

Sunday Lunch at Massimo in Sanur

We delivered this product to Massimo restaurant on Jl. Danau Tamblingan in Sanur four weeks ago. Massimo is Italian. Checked tablecloths, ceiling fans, a wine list written on a chalkboard near the door. The kind of place where the bread basket arrives before you have finished deciding whether to sit inside or outside. Sanur draws a different crowd from Seminyak. Longer stays, older guests, a lot of European retirees and expats who have been coming to Bali for twenty years and know exactly which table to request.

The booking was a birthday lunch for a Dutch woman named Lieselotte, celebrating with four friends. Her husband had flown in from Amsterdam two days earlier. He WhatsApped me the Thursday before and asked what worked for a lunch table. I told him the pot arrangement was the one. A wrapped bouquet at a restaurant table takes up space and eventually needs to go on the floor. The pot sits. It holds its position. It does not tip, does not need tying to a chair, does not get in the way of the pasta.

We delivered at 11:30, ninety minutes before the table was booked. The staff at Massimo placed the pot at the centre of the table. By the time Lieselotte and her friends arrived at 1pm, the hot pink blooms had opened a little further from the heat in the room. She lifted the pot when she saw it. Put it down. Picked it up again. Said something in Dutch to one of her friends that made the table laugh. Her husband told me later that she had asked whether she could take it home on the flight. He said yes. She did.

The Singapore Call

A woman named Priya called the shop on a Wednesday afternoon. She was calling from Singapore. Her sister was staying at a villa in Berawa with her husband for their fifth wedding anniversary, and Priya wanted flowers delivered to the villa that same evening. She had already looked at the website but was stuck between two products.

"I want something that looks like it belongs in the villa," she said. "Not delivery flowers."

That line. Exactly that line. I hear a version of it at least once a week. "Not delivery flowers." It is what almost everyone sending to a villa actually wants and very few people know how to ask for. I told Priya about this product. Clay pot, five colours, no vase required. She asked if the pot was nice or just functional. I told her terracotta is terracotta. It is always nice in Bali because it matches everything else.

She ordered. We delivered to the villa on Jl. Pantai Berawa at 7pm. Priya messaged me the next morning. Her sister had photographed the pot from four angles and sent every one of them. The final message in Priya's screen shot was her sister writing: "The flowers are stunning but I'm actually obsessed with the pot. Does Bali just make everything look good?"

Ay Ayu Running Sunny Florist Bali since 2013

Caring for pot roses is different from caring for vase roses. The roses drink through floral foam, not open water. To keep the foam moist, pour a small amount of water directly into the pot, around the base of the stems, every second day. About 100ml is enough. The foam absorbs it. You are not filling a vase, you are watering the foam. Do not flood it. If you see water pooling on the surface of the foam and staying there, you have added too much. The roses should last five to six days maintained this way. I also tell people to keep the pot away from direct afternoon sun. Bali's afternoon UV index runs between 10 and 12 year-round. That is twice what you get in most European climates. The yellow roses will hold their colour longest. The hot pink will be the first to shift. Keep the pot inside in indirect light and the colour balance holds for the full five days. If it goes on a terrace in direct sun, you will lose three days of vase life from the pink and orange blooms first.

Who Orders This

Villa guests and Airbnb arrivals make up a large share of orders. This product fits villa settings in a way that wrapped bouquets do not, particularly in the areas that lean toward natural materials and Balinese decor: Kerobokan, Pererenan, and the quieter streets of Canggu away from the beach clubs. People sending to long-stay accommodation where the recipient has a kitchen table, a living room shelf, a bathroom vanity. Somewhere to put a pot without worrying about finding a vase.

Hotel room deliveries to properties in Sanur and Nusa Dua where room attendants know how to style a display. Birthday deliveries for people who want colour across five tones rather than one. Anniversary couples who want something that reads as considered. Senders from Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan who want the arrangement to feel permanent rather than transient. Restaurant lunch and dinner deliveries where a centrepiece needs to stay put during a meal. Anyone who has ever had a bouquet tip over or take up the chair at the table.

For the mixed-colour roses in a vase format, see the Bali Mixed Rose Bunch. For a single-colour rose alternative, the 12 Pink Roses at $38 or the 12 Red Roses at $38. Browse the full rose range or the complete arrangement collection.

Order Now. Here Is Why.

$40 for twelve roses in five colours, set in a terracotta pot that fits Bali like it was made here. Because it was. No vase required. No unwrapping. No standing over a sink trimming stems in a hotel bathroom. The pot arrives and it is already the display.

We have delivered this product to restaurants in Sanur, villas in Berawa, hotel rooms in Kuta, and Airbnbs in Ubud. The reaction is consistent regardless of venue. People pick it up. They photograph it. They ask about the pot. They notice that it does not look like something that just arrived. That reaction is worth $40 every single time. Order before midday and it arrives today. Order now.

Care

These roses are arranged in floral foam inside the pot, not in open water. Add approximately 100ml of water directly into the pot every second day, pouring around the base of the stems so the foam absorbs it. Do not flood the pot. The roses should last five to six days with this care routine. Keep away from direct sunlight, particularly afternoon sun. Remove any petals or foliage that fall into the pot. The hot pink and orange-coral blooms will be the first to change colour in high UV conditions. Keep the arrangement indoors in indirect light for the longest colour life. Yellow roses will hold their tone longest.

Delivery

Same day delivery across all areas of Bali, seven days a week. Orders placed before midday arrive by evening. For villa and Airbnb deliveries, include the full address and any gate codes in your order notes. For hotel deliveries, include the guest name and room number where known. We coordinate directly with resort reception for timed deliveries. Delivery to Tanah Lot, Gianyar, Tabanan, Pecatu, and Tibubeneng. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.

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