Bunch Calla Lilies
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Description
White calla lilies in a clear glass vase with bear grass threading between the stems. No roses. No mixed flowers. No filler foliage. One flower type, displayed in water so you can see the stems through the glass, with an aqua ribbon tied around the vase. This is the only product in the collection where calla lilies stand alone. Twenty-first most popular across all of Bali and one of the most reordered products by hotels, restaurants, and Airbnb managers on the island.
$45.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Uluwatu, Canggu, Bingin, Seminyak, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Calla lilies with bear grass in a glass vase.
What Arrives
A clear glass vase filled with water. Inside: white calla lilies and thin strands of bear grass. The calla stems are visible through the glass and that visibility is part of the design. Thick, pale green, slightly translucent. They look different from rose stems or chrysanthemum stems because calla stems are fleshy and smooth rather than woody. They carry water inside their own tissue, which is why they look almost succulent through the glass.
The spathes are white. Smooth, curved, wider at the top and tapering to a gentle point. Each one curls around a central spadix. The shape people call a trumpet or a funnel. Bear grass runs through and above the calla lilies in thin arching strands. It adds vertical movement and a few lines of green against the white. An aqua ribbon wraps the vase at the waist.
No broad leaves. No clusters of secondary flowers. The vase holds calla lilies and bear grass. The empty space between stems is there on purpose.
Why Restaurants and Hotels Keep Ordering This
Sardine Restaurant in Kerobokan ordered three of these for their hostess stand and the front tables by the rice paddy view. The restaurant manager said the flowers needed to be interesting enough to photograph but quiet enough to disappear behind a conversation. Calla lilies in glass did that. Mixed bouquets on the same tables had drawn comments like "the flowers are a bit much" from guests who wanted the view, not a centrepiece competing with it. The callas stayed. Six months of weekly reorders before the manager even tried a different product.
Katamama Hotel in Seminyak uses them in the spa lobby. The building is raw brick and teak and the interior design team told me they needed flowers that matched the architecture. Calla lilies in glass read as architectural. A mixed bouquet in the same spot read as decoration. That distinction matters to hotels where the interior has a point of view. Calla lilies look like they were chosen. Mixed bouquets look like someone ordered flowers.
For resorts and Airbnbs, browse our Balinese arrangement collection or the bouquet range for options with more colour. But if the space has strong design language already, this is the product that fits inside it instead of arguing with it.
I worked at two resorts before opening the shop. Nusa Dua. Ubud. At both places the lobby flowers were always single-variety displays. White orchids in one, frangipani floats in the other. The hotels never mixed flower types in high-traffic areas because a single variety reads as a decision. Like someone with authority picked exactly this. A mixed arrangement in the same spot reads as "the florist brought whatever was fresh." I did not understand that difference until a food and beverage director at the Nusa Dua resort told me directly. He said mixed flowers look like a gift. Single flowers look like design. That sentence changed how I thought about commercial floristry. When I opened Sunny Florist in 2013 on Jl. Camplung Tanduk, the Bunch Calla Lilies was one of the first five products I built because I already knew from my resort years that bars and restaurants would come looking for something like this. It took about four months. They did.
The WhatsApp From a Villa Manager in Uluwatu
A German couple ran a four-bedroom clifftop villa in Ungasan, rented through Airbnb. The wife messaged me on WhatsApp at 6:15am. She had new guests arriving from Munich that afternoon and wanted flowers for the living room table. She sent a photo of the space: polished concrete floors, floor-to-ceiling glass, rattan furniture, ocean view. She wrote "nothing tropical and nothing with too many colours please, it needs to match the house."
I suggested the Bunch Calla Lilies. She asked to see a photo. I sent one. She ordered two. Kadek delivered them at 1pm, ninety minutes before the guests checked in. The wife messaged me that evening with a photo of one vase on the dining table and one on the bathroom vanity. The guests had asked within twenty minutes where the flowers came from.
She now orders two every time a new booking starts. Sometimes three if the booking is a honeymoon. She told me once that the calla lilies are the only flowers that have never clashed with any guest's taste. They work with everything because they are not trying to be the centre of attention.
How This Differs From the Calla Bouquets
We sell four products that feature calla lilies. Three of them combine calla lilies with roses: the 12 White Roses + 3 Calla Lilies, the 12 Mixed Roses + 3 Calla Lilies, and the 12 Pink Roses + 3 Calla Lilies. All $45. In those three, the calla lilies play a supporting role. They add a different shape to the rose dome. They give the eye a break from round petals.
This product is different. The calla lilies are the entire arrangement. No roses. No chrysanthemums. No secondary flowers to fill space. The bear grass adds lines and movement but it is not a flower. It is an accent. Everything here is about the spathe shape repeated at slightly different angles in a glass vase. The repetition creates a rhythm that mixed bouquets cannot produce because mixed flowers compete for the viewer's attention. Calla lilies alone hold it.
If you want callas with the warmth of roses, order any of the three calla-rose bouquets. If you want the callas to be the point, this is the one.
Someone asked me once why I sell calla lilies in a glass vase instead of wrapping them like the other bouquets. I told her: look at the stems. Calla stems are not like rose stems. They are fleshy, pale green, almost see-through when the light hits them. Wrapping them in paper hides the best part. In a glass vase with water and bear grass the stems become part of the design. You see the full flower from spathe to base. The other reason is practical. Calla stems are hollow inside. They are softer than woody stems and they bruise if you crush them into paper or bind them too tightly. A glass vase gives them room. The water level also matters more with callas than with any other flower I work with. Roses want deep water, two thirds up the stem. Callas want shallow. Five to eight centimetres. More than that and the fleshy stems sit in too much water and go soft at the base within three days. Shallow water, changed every second day. That is the entire care routine.
Who Orders This
Villa managers placing weekly orders for guest arrivals. Restaurant owners in Canggu and Seminyak who want table flowers that photograph well without dominating the plate. Spa lobbies and yoga studio reception desks. Airbnb hosts who leave flowers for every check-in and need something that suits every room and every guest. Couples sending anniversary flowers where the recipient has strong taste and the sender knows a mixed bouquet would miss the mark. Interior designers ordering for photo shoots. Expats with minimal apartments who want one good thing on the table rather than twelve different blooms competing for space.
International senders order this from Germany, France, Scandinavia, and Japan more than any other product in the collection. The calla lily is a flower that translates across every culture without explanation. You do not need to know Balinese flower customs or read up on Indonesian colour codes. White callas in glass work everywhere.
If you prefer roses, browse the full rose range. For birthday flowers with more colour, the bouquet and arrangement collections have options at every price. For something with the same clean energy but in an arrangement pot, see the Balinese arrangements. And if you cannot decide, the bestsellers page shows what other people ordered most.
Care
The flowers arrive in the glass vase, ready to display. No unwrapping, no trimming, no assembly. Place the vase where you want it. Keep the water level shallow: five to eight centimetres is enough. Calla stems are fleshy and absorb water through their outer tissue as well as through the cut base. Too much water causes the stem to soften and go translucent at the bottom, which shortens the life of the flower. Change the water every second day. When you change it, trim one centimetre from each stem base. The bear grass needs no care.
Keep the vase away from direct sunlight. Calla spathes are white and UV will yellow the edges within forty-eight hours of strong exposure. A spot with indirect light and good airflow is ideal. In Bali's humidity the spathes hold their shape well. Seven to ten days is a normal display life when the water is kept fresh and shallow.
Delivery
Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. The vase is transported upright in a padded carrier so the water stays level and the stems stay in position. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. For restaurant or hotel deliveries include the venue name and any specific placement instructions in your order notes. Kadek will coordinate directly with reception or front-of-house staff on arrival. Delivery to Tanah Lot, Tuban, Ubud, and all south Bali locations. Seven days a week. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.