Same Day Flower Delivery To All Locations In Bali

Bali Bright Bunch

Same Day Delivery
$45.00
+

Five flower types in one bouquet. Orange gerberas, blue irises, yellow lily buds, red roses, and green fern, wrapped in kraft paper with a coral ribbon bow. The third most popular product across all of Bali and the number one birthday bouquet in the collection. Not roses. Not romantic. Just bright, cheerful, and impossible to send for the wrong occasion. The most delivered bouquet to Made's Warung and Potato Head, where ninety percent of deliveries are birthdays. Lilies arrive as buds and open over three days, giving the recipient a second visual event inside the bouquet they already have. $45, same day delivery, anywhere in Bali. Order now.

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Description

Orange gerberas, blue irises, yellow lily buds, red roses, and green fern fronds wrapped in kraft paper with a coral ribbon bow. Five flower types in one bouquet. This is the third most popular product across all of Bali. Not a rose product. Not a single-colour product. A mixed bunch of bright flowers that outsells nearly everything in the collection including products twice its price. Third in Canggu, sixth in Ubud, third in Seminyak, fifth in Tabanan, eighth in Kuta and Legian, and second in Benoa.

$45.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Nusa Dua, Kerobokan, Sanur, Denpasar, Jimbaran and Kuta. Mixed flower bouquet in kraft paper with ribbon.

What Arrives

A hand-tied bouquet wrapped in two layers of paper. The inner layer is a darker grey-green tissue. The outer layer is natural kraft brown, folded into wide sheets that rise up around the sides and fan open behind the flowers. A coral-pink satin ribbon ties the waist in a full bow. The bouquet stands upright and the overall shape is a broad V that opens from the ribbon up to the widest point of the blooms.

The flowers inside are a mix of five types. Orange gerberas sit at the front and through the middle, large round daisy-shaped blooms with dark centres and bright orange petals that read from across a room. Blue-purple irises are scattered through the arrangement, their upward-pointing petals adding height and a colour that nothing else in the collection provides. Yellow lily buds, still closed and pointed, sit among the other flowers and will open over the days after delivery. Red roses in deep classic red fill the gaps, smaller than the gerberas but adding that familiar warmth. Green fern fronds poke up from the back and sides, feathery and light, lifting the bouquet's silhouette above the flower line.

The colour spread covers four of the five primary colour families: orange, blue-purple, yellow, and red with green foliage tying them together. No single colour dominates. That is the entire point of the product.

Why a Mixed Bunch Ranks Third

Red roses account for most of the bestsellers in the collection. The top ten is dominated by rose products at various counts and price points. This bouquet has no more than a handful of roses in it. It competes against products with twelve, twenty, and twenty-four stems of the world's most popular flower and it still ranks third across all of Bali.

The reason is the occasion it serves. Roses commit the sender to a message. Red means romance. Pink means affection. White carries a formality that some people associate with sympathy. Every mono-colour rose product narrows the relationship between sender and recipient to whatever that colour declares. This bouquet declares nothing except "happy." The colours are bright. The mood is cheerful. The message is celebration without agenda. And the occasion that fits that description better than any other is a birthday.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

People assume the bestselling products are always roses. This bouquet has been in the top five since 2016 and the reason is simple. Roses say something specific. This bouquet says "I remembered your birthday" and nothing more. That is what most senders actually need. They do not need to declare love or apologise or mark a romantic milestone. They need to send flowers to a friend, a colleague, a sister, a mother, a daughter-in-law, a neighbour they like. Roses feel like too much for those relationships. A bright mixed bunch feels right. The person who orders this product has usually already scrolled past twelve red roses and twenty pink roses and thought "those are not what I am looking for." They get to this page and stop scrolling. The colours match the occasion. Orange and yellow and blue do not carry romantic weight. They carry warmth.

Second in Benoa and the Birthday Effect

Benoa ranks this product second. The Tanjung Benoa peninsula stretches south of Nusa Dua along a narrow strip of mid-range to upper-range resorts. The Conrad, the Novotel, the Holiday Inn, and a string of smaller hotels line the road. The guests are couples, families, and groups on organised tours and package holidays from Australia, Japan, China, and Southeast Asia.

This product is the most sent bouquet to two of Seminyak's most recognisable venues: Made's Warung and Potato Head Beach Club. Ninety percent of those deliveries are for birthdays. That statistic explains almost everything about why the product ranks where it does. Birthday flowers to a restaurant or a beach club need to hit a very specific brief. They need to be colourful enough to photograph well on a table. They need to suit any gender. They need to feel celebratory without being romantic. And they need to arrive wrapped and ready to carry, because the recipient is going to walk out of the venue holding them.

Made's Warung on Jl. Raya Seminyak has been a Bali institution since the 1970s. It is where groups go for birthday dinners. The tables are close together, the atmosphere is relaxed, and a bouquet of bright flowers on the table reads as a birthday, not a proposal. Potato Head sits on the Seminyak-Petitenget stretch and draws a younger crowd: day-to-night visitors who move from the pool to the bar. A birthday delivery to Potato Head needs to look good against the backdrop of sunbeds and infinity pools. Orange and yellow and blue do that. Twelve red roses in that setting look like someone sent a Valentine's gift to the wrong venue.

The Flowers and What They Do

Each flower type in the bouquet serves a different visual role and has a different lifespan. Understanding both matters because this bouquet changes as the days pass.

The orange gerberas are the anchor. They are the largest individual blooms, about eight to ten centimetres across, and they face forward so they catch the eye first. Gerberas are sturdy in tropical heat and hold colour well, but they are also the first flower in the bunch to show fatigue. The stems soften before the petals drop. By day four or five the heads start tilting even if the petals still look fresh. That is normal gerbera behaviour. Propping the stems against the vase wall extends the display.

The irises are the colour nobody expects. Blue-purple is rare in tropical floristry. Most flowers grown in Bali's climate are warm-toned: reds, oranges, yellows, pinks. The iris adds a cool contrast that makes the warm colours around it pop harder. I source irises separately from my regular supplier because they are not a standard Bali market flower. They last three to four days in a vase, shorter than the roses and gerberas, but the visual contribution in those first days is worth the shorter lifespan.

The yellow lily buds are closed on arrival. That is deliberate. A fully open lily in a mixed bunch competes with the gerberas for attention because both are large-faced flowers. By keeping the lilies at bud stage, the bouquet arrives with the gerberas as the dominant bloom. Over days two to four the lily buds open and the bouquet gets a second visual event. The recipient watches new flowers appear inside the arrangement they already have. The opening lilies also release fragrance that the bouquet does not have on day one.

The red roses are the familiar element. In a bouquet of unusual colours, the red roses ground everything. They give the eye something it recognises while the irises and gerberas provide the surprise.

Ay Ayu Florist since 2013, balifloristshop.com

I built the first version of this bouquet in 2014 for a customer who asked for "something that is not roses and not boring." That request stuck with me because it described a gap in the range that I had not noticed. Everything I sold at the time was either red roses or tropical arrangements. There was nothing bright and cheerful in between. I put together a test batch using gerberas, irises, lily buds, and a few roses. The gerberas gave it scale. The irises gave it a colour that made people stop and look. The lilies gave it something to do over the next few days. And the roses gave it just enough tradition that a person sending it would not feel like they were taking a risk. I listed it and it climbed into the top ten within four months. It has not left since. The product has barely changed from that first version because the combination works. I adjust the exact stems depending on what the market has on any given morning, but the four flower types and the colour balance have stayed the same for over ten years.

Where It Ranks and Why

Third in Canggu. The birthday occasion drives the Canggu ranking. Canggu is full of young expats and digital nomads in their twenties and thirties celebrating each other's birthdays at villa pool parties, brunch spots in Berawa, and surf cafes along Batu Bolong. A bright mixed bunch on a birthday table at a Canggu villa looks right in a way that red roses do not. The age group and the social context call for colour and energy rather than romance.

Third in Seminyak. The Made's Warung and Potato Head deliveries pull the Seminyak ranking up but the product also goes to birthday dinners at smaller restaurants along Jl. Kayu Aya, hotel rooms where friends are celebrating together, and Seminyak villas booked for group holidays.

Sixth in Ubud. Ubud buyers lean toward roses and tropical arrangements more than mixed bunches. The Ubud sensibility tends toward nature-forward products that match the rice terrace and jungle surroundings. A bright orange and blue bouquet does not match the Ubud aesthetic as strongly as it matches the beach-area energy of Canggu and Seminyak. Sixth is still solid. It means the birthday occasion overrides the aesthetic preference often enough to keep the product in the top ten even in a market that should favour subtler tones.

Fifth in Tabanan. Tabanan orders for this product tend to come from local Balinese families sending for birthdays and celebrations at home. The bright colours translate across cultures and occasions. A birthday in a Tabanan family home looks different from a birthday at Potato Head but the colour palette works in both settings.

Eighth in Kuta and Legian. These areas have a higher concentration of romantic-occasion orders, which pushes rose products higher and mixed bunches lower. Eighth still means the product appears in almost every week of Kuta and Legian order data, driven by birthday deliveries to hotels along the strip.

Who Orders This

Friends sending birthday flowers. Colleagues sending congratulations. Family members celebrating milestones that are not romantic. Anyone who looked at the roses and thought "too much" for the relationship. Senders to restaurants, beach clubs, and cafes where the flowers will be on a table surrounded by other people. International senders from Australia, Singapore, and the UK who want a safe, colourful gift that suits any recipient regardless of gender or relationship type. Senders to villas in Umalas, Gianyar, and Pecatu who want something cheerful for a non-romantic occasion. Anniversary senders who prefer variety over volume.

For the same price with a white-flower alternative, see the 12 White Roses + 3 Calla Lilies at $45. For more flowers at a higher price, browse our hand-tied bouquets. For arrangements in pots that need no vase, see the arrangement range. For gift sets with bears and chocolates, browse the gift collection.

Care

Unwrap the kraft paper and remove the ribbon. Trim all stems at a diagonal, removing about two centimetres. Place in a wide vase with fresh water. The gerberas have thick stems that benefit from a clean cut. The iris stems are thinner and softer. The lily buds need room above them because the blooms will open wide over the next few days. Strip any foliage that falls below the waterline. Change the water every two days and re-trim on day three. The roses and gerberas will last five to six days. The irises are best through day three or four. Remove them when they fade and the bouquet will still look full because the lilies will be opening to take their place. Fern fronds hold for the full run.

Delivery

Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. Seven days a week including Sundays and public holidays. Delivery to Benoa, Nusa Dua, Sanur, and all locations. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.

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