Same Day Flower Delivery To All Locations In Bali

Alesha

Same Day Delivery
$47.00
+

Six flower types in one pot. Red roses for drama, purple dendrobium orchids for staying power, a big white chrysanthemum anchoring the middle, yellow spray mums across the front, red alstroemeria threading through the top, and lisianthus buds softening the edges. Alesha is the arrangement that changes over the week. Roses steal the show on day one, chrysanthemums take over by day five, orchids hold steady the whole time. Arrives in a Balinese terracotta pot, no vase needed. $47 USD, same day delivery, seven days a week across Bali.

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Description

Six flower types, five colours, one pot. Alesha is the loud one in the collection.

$47.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Kuta, Ubud, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Arrives in a brown terracotta ceramic pot, ready to display.

What's Inside

The large white disbud chrysanthemum holds the centre. Round, full, and the biggest single bloom in the arrangement. Around it: two to three red roses on the left, yellow spray chrysanthemums scattered across the front, white spray chrysanthemums mixed in between, and purple dendrobium orchid sprays trailing out on both sides. Red alstroemeria thread through the upper section with their pointed petals and that characteristic dark-to-light colour shift. Cream lisianthus buds sit near the top, still closed or half open. They soften the arrangement against the bolder blooms below.

Tall green blade leaves rise from the centre and push the height well above the flower line. A couple of thin reddish-brown decorative sticks sit among them. Two large round tropical leaves provide the structural backdrop, and fine feathery fern fills the base. Small green chrysanthemum buds sit at the very front. They start showing colour by mid-week.

The Colour Mix

Five colours in one arrangement sounds like it should clash. It doesn't. The warm tones, red roses and yellow chrysanthemums, sit in the body. The cool tones, purple orchids, frame the edges. The white disbud chrysanthemum in the middle acts as a rest point between them. Your eye lands on the white first, then travels outward to the colour. That's how colour balance works in a mixed arrangement, and it's the reason the white bloom is the biggest one in there.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

"At the resorts I used to set up events, sometimes thirty or forty tables in one ballroom. You learn fast which centrepieces work from across the room and which ones look like somebody tipped a bucket of flowers out. The difference was always a white anchor. One big calm bloom that everything else orbits around. In Alesha that's the disbud chrysanthemum. The red and the purple and the yellow all read as separate colours because the white gives the eye a place to reset between them. Take it out and the whole thing blurs."

The Pot

Alesha comes in a brown terracotta pot. Simple, solid, Balinese-made. The recipient does not need to find a vase, trim stems to fit something from the kitchen cupboard, or worry about water spilling. The pot holds the foam, the foam holds the water, the flowers stay put. It also means the arrangement travels well. Nothing shifts on the back of a motorbike between Kerobokan and Berawa, nothing tips going up the hill to Ungasan.

The terracotta adds something to the look, too. It grounds all that colour. Without it, the arrangement would float visually. With the warm brown at the base, the eye has a foundation and the flowers lift from something solid rather than from nothing.

Roses and Orchids Together

Roses and dendrobium orchids have different temperaments. Roses open fast, peak around day two, and begin softening by day four. Dendrobiums barely change. They sit at whatever stage they arrived in and hold it for a week, sometimes longer. Putting them in the same arrangement is deliberate. The roses bring that immediate drama, deep red against white, the kind of colour contrast people notice first. The orchids bring staying power. Once the roses have done their part, the purple orchids and yellow chrysanthemums are still going strong.

The orchids in Alesha are locally grown. Same supplier, same morning cut. Purple dendrobiums have a natural gradient, darker at the petal edges and lighter at the throat, and that colour shift picks up the red of the roses on one side and the white of the chrysanthemum on the other. They tie the whole arrangement together without anyone noticing they're doing it.

How It Changes Over the Week

A mixed arrangement with this many flower types does not stay the same. Day one, the roses dominate. Fully coloured, fully open, the most eye-catching thing in the pot. By day three the roses have started to relax while the chrysanthemum buds are just hitting their stride. Yellow spray mums that were half closed on arrival are now wide open. The small green buds at the front start showing colour. The orchids hold. The alstroemeria keep pushing new blooms open along the stem.

By day five or six, the arrangement looks different from the one that was delivered. Red fades out. Yellow and purple take over as the mums and orchids outlast the roses. It is like getting a second arrangement mid-week without paying for one.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

"Roses always steal the show first. They open fast, they're dramatic, they're red. But chrysanthemums are patient. The spray mums in Alesha are still throwing out fresh blooms on day five when the roses have gone soft. And the orchids barely move at all, they just hold their colour and wait. A guest at one of the Ubud resorts once asked me if someone had come in overnight and swapped the flowers. Nobody had. The same arrangement just looked completely different because the chrysanthemums had caught up while the roses stepped back. I plan for that now. It is not a flaw, it is the whole point of mixing fast openers with slow ones."

Who Sends Alesha

Birthdays, mostly. Five colours say celebration louder than any card. But we see Alesha ordered for anniversaries, thank-you gestures, apologies, get-well wishes, and general "I was thinking about you" moments. The multi-colour palette works for anything that is not sympathy. For sympathy, Asha in all white is the better call.

Visitors sending flowers to a villa in Umalas or a hotel in Batu Bolong tend to choose Alesha because the colours photograph well and the arrangement looks like more than $47 spent on it. Customers ordering from Australia, the US, or Europe get this a lot. At this price point, getting roses and orchids and chrysanthemums and alstroemeria in a single arrangement with same day delivery is hard to match anywhere.

Want to make it bigger? Add a chocolate hamper or one of our gift packages alongside. We deliver both together.

Care

Top up the foam with a small amount of water every day. Pour slowly into the base of the pot so the foam absorbs without pooling around the stems. Roses will drop petals first and that is normal. Remove spent rose blooms as they finish to give the chrysanthemums and orchids room to take over. Keep out of direct sun and away from air conditioning vents blowing directly onto the flowers.

The orchids and chrysanthemums should carry the arrangement comfortably to day seven or beyond.

Delivery

Same day delivery, seven days a week, everywhere we reach across Bali. Pererenan, Bingin, Canggu, and all areas. Order before 3pm Bali time for same day.

Need to change something after ordering? Call +62 813 3862 5637 during business hours (Mon-Fri 7am to 7pm, Sat-Sun 7am to 6pm) or reach us through the contact page.

Browse all twelve Balinese Arrangements, or see our full flower collection and hand-poured Bali candles. Read more about who makes your flowers on our About Us page.

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