12 Pink Roses With 3 Calla Lilies
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Description
Twelve soft pink roses and three white calla lilies wrapped in kraft paper with eucalyptus foliage throughout. The kraft sheets fan open behind the bouquet and a coral-pink satin ribbon ties the waist in a full bow with branded ribbon tails. This is the third of three calla lily bouquets in the collection and the one that sits in the middle of the range in both mood and ranking. Thirteenth most popular across all of Bali.
$45.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Kuta, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Pink roses and white calla lilies, kraft paper with eucalyptus, hand-tied bunch.
What Arrives
Fifteen flowers. Twelve roses in a soft medium pink, partially open with layered petals visible on the outermost blooms and tighter spiral centres on the inner ones. Three white calla lilies rise among the roses, their smooth curved spathes taller than the rose line. The callas face slightly outward, angled so the white catches light from the front.
Between the flowers sits round-leaf eucalyptus. The silvery-green leaves are visible from every angle, threading through the roses and sitting at the edges of the bouquet where they spill just past the kraft paper. The eucalyptus adds a third colour layer: pink, white, and silvery green. It also adds a scent. Eucalyptus carries a clean, cool fragrance that hits when the recipient leans in to smell the roses. The combination is one of those things that works better in person than it sounds on a screen.
The kraft paper is natural brown, folded into two wide sheets that rise up around the sides and fan open behind the flower line. A darker inner tissue sits between the paper and the stems. The coral ribbon and branded tails match the pink of the roses closely enough that the whole bouquet reads as a single tonal range from pale pink through to warm brown with the white callas and silver-green eucalyptus as the contrast.
Three Calla Bouquets, Three Moods
We sell three products at $45 that combine twelve roses with three white calla lilies. Same stem count. Same price. Different character.
The white version is all neutral. Twelve white roses, three white callas, no colour at all. It ranks eleventh. That version works for every occasion including sympathy, which is why it ranks highest. It says whatever the card says because the flowers carry no mood of their own.
The mixed colour version is all energy. Four rose colours in one bunch with the white callas acting as visual separators. It ranks fourteenth. That version works for birthdays and celebrations where the sender wants the flowers to announce themselves across a room.
This pink version sits between the two. Pink carries warmth without the volume of four colours. It carries femininity without the formality of all-white. It works for birthdays, anniversaries, congratulations, new baby celebrations, and the occasions where the sender knows the recipient well enough to choose pink but not well enough to choose red. Thirteenth. One position above the mixed version, two below the white. The rankings tell you exactly where this product sits in the decision tree: between safe and bold.
People assume pink flowers are only for women. I hear it constantly. "My partner is a guy, so I should probably get red." That assumption costs senders a good option. Pink roses with white calla lilies read as soft and considered, not gendered. I have delivered this exact product to men at hotels in Legian and Sanur and the reaction has never once been "why did you send me pink flowers." The reaction is always about the calla lilies. The white trumpets change the context. They pull the arrangement from "pink" toward "designed." Pink roses alone can feel feminine. Pink roses with white callas and eucalyptus feels like someone walked into a florist and said "put something together for me." Two of my most consistent repeat orders for this product are from women sending to their husbands. The husbands photograph the bouquet and send the photo back. Nobody has ever asked for a different colour.
Eucalyptus and What It Does in This Product
Most bouquets in the collection use dark glossy salal leaves as foliage. The salal sits between stems and its job is to be invisible. Green background. Nothing more.
This product uses eucalyptus instead. The round silvery-green leaves sit on arching stems and they are not invisible. They occupy a visual layer between the pink roses and the white callas. The silver-green against soft pink creates a tonal palette that you do not get with standard dark-leaf foliage. Dark green makes pink look brighter. Silver-green makes pink look softer. That softening is what gives this bouquet its particular character.
The eucalyptus also dries well. Long after the roses and callas have finished, the eucalyptus stems can be kept in a vase on their own. They dry to a muted sage colour and hold their shape for weeks. Some recipients keep the dried eucalyptus as a room decoration well past the life of the flowers. It is a small detail but it extends the memory of the gift beyond the usual five-to-seven-day window.
Last Week at Bread Yard
We delivered this product to Bread Yard in Seminyak last week for Jane's birthday. Bread Yard sits on Jl. Kayu Jati and draws a brunch crowd that skews toward young professionals, expat couples, and the kind of people who photograph their acai bowls before eating them. Jane's friend organised the delivery. She WhatsApped me on Monday and said the lunch was on Thursday at noon. She wanted flowers on the table before the group arrived.
I asked what kind. She said pink because Jane "loves pink and hates anything that looks like it is trying too hard." That description narrowed the options to two: the twelve pink roses at $38 or this product. She went with this one because the calla lilies and the kraft paper gave it a "cafe table" quality that the bare stem bouquet did not have. Her words. I delivered at 11:40. Bread Yard staff placed the bouquet at Jane's seat. When Jane arrived, she picked up the bouquet, smelled the eucalyptus before the roses, and said "this smells like a spa." Three of the women at the table asked where the flowers were from. One ordered that same afternoon for her own mother's birthday the following week.
I added eucalyptus to the pink calla bouquet in 2017 after testing the product without it for two years. The original version was just pink roses and white callas with standard dark-leaf foliage. It sold fine. But when I compared it to the way European florists were building bouquets at the time, something was missing. The dark leaves made the pink look almost artificial, too clean, too uniform. I tried eucalyptus because the round silvery leaves softened the overall palette without adding another flower colour. The first batch I built with eucalyptus looked different from every other bouquet on the website. It looked like something from a flower market in London or Melbourne rather than a tropical florist in Bali. That was the point. This product attracts buyers who want something that does not look tropical. They are in Bali but they want flowers that would not be out of place in a cafe in Bondi or a restaurant in Shoreditch. The eucalyptus is the ingredient that bridges that gap.
Who Orders This
Birthday senders. Friends ordering to Seminyak restaurants like Bread Yard, Batu Bolong cafes, and Berawa brunch spots. Partners sending to villas in Kerobokan and Umalas for anniversaries and celebrations. Daughters sending to mothers at resort hotels in Nusa Dua and Jimbaran. International senders from Australia and the UK who want pink without the risk of "too feminine" because the callas and eucalyptus balance the palette. New baby celebrations where the family wants flowers that feel warm but not over the top. Anyone who loved the idea of pink roses but wanted roses plus something extra. Valentine's Day senders who want something softer than red.
For the all-white version, see the 12 White Roses + 3 Calla Lilies. For the mixed colour version, see the 12 Mixed Roses + 3 Calla Lilies. For pink roses without callas at a lower price, see the 12 Pink Roses at $38. Browse the full bouquet collection or see our rose range.
Care
Unwrap the kraft paper and trim all stems at a diagonal. Place in a wide vase with fresh water. The calla stems are thicker than the rose stems and both drink at different rates. Top up the water daily and change completely on day three. The eucalyptus stems can stay in the vase with the flowers or be removed and kept separately. Eucalyptus dries to a sage tone and holds shape for weeks after the flowers have finished. Strip any foliage below the waterline. Roses will last five to six days. Callas will hold for seven to ten. 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 time in your order notes. Delivery to Tabanan, Gianyar, Pecatu, and Pererenan. Seven days a week. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.