Same Day Flower Delivery To All Locations In Bali

Marley

Same Day Delivery
$47.00
+

Seven flower types in one pot and every one of them earns its place. Deep red roses for impact. A white polaris chrysanthemum the size of a fist anchoring the centre. Purple orchids with white throats on both sides. White lisianthus that looks like a garden rose but outlasts actual roses by days. Purple and yellow spray chrysanthemums filling every level. A cattail and blade leaves for vertical reach. Marley is the sampler, the one you send when you don't know what they like because you don't need to know. Third most popular arrangement to both Seminyak and Ubud. Seven flower types, $47 USD, ceramic pot included, same day delivery across Bali, seven days a week.

Delivery
Payment Options
Why Buy With Us

Satisfaction GuaranteedWe promise you will be amazed with your flowers!

Order Safely From Any DeviceUsing our secure payment gateway – PayPal.

Same Day DeliveryOrder before 3pm local time for same day delivery to major tourist destinations in South Bali.

Pay With PayPalPay with your PayPal account, or by using any credit card.

English & Indonesian Speaking

Description

Marley has a bit of everything. Red roses, a white polaris chrysanthemum the size of a fist, purple orchids, yellow and purple spray chrysanthemums, white lisianthus, a cattail, blade leaves, and fern. Seven flower types in one pot. It is the sampler arrangement and it is our third most popular product to Seminyak and Ubud.

$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 ceramic pot, ready to display.

What's Inside

A single white polaris chrysanthemum sits dead centre. Round, full, tightly packed petals. It is the largest individual bloom in the arrangement and acts as the anchor point. Two to three deep red roses flank it on both sides, fully open with dark velvet petals. Above them, lavender spray chrysanthemums with white-edged petals and purple centres climb through the upper section. White lisianthus stems rise on the right, some blooms open with ruffled edges, some still in bud. Yellow spray chrysanthemums fill both sides of the mid-lower section.

Purple dendrobium orchid sprays sit low on both sides, their blooms open with white throats. A single cattail rises through the centre alongside green blade leaves, and a broad dark tropical leaf frames the back. Fine feathery fern fills the base edges. The pot is brown ceramic, mostly hidden beneath the foliage.

Why the Sampler Sells

People who know exactly what their recipient loves can choose a specific arrangement. Pink roses, go with Kyla. Pastels, go with Mia. Tropical drama, Farah. But most people ordering flowers for someone in Bali are not sure. They might be sending to a friend, a colleague, a host, someone they've not seen in a year. They don't know if the person prefers roses or orchids, bold or soft, modern or traditional.

Marley solves that problem by including something from every category. Roses for the person who loves roses. Orchids for the person who loves orchids. Chrysanthemums for longevity. Lisianthus for texture. The cattail and blade leaves for height and tropical character. It covers every preference without committing to one. That's why it outsells most of the curated designs as a gift from overseas senders. When you don't know, you send Marley.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

"When I worked in hotel floristry, the lobby arrangements were always samplers. Management wanted guests walking in to see roses and orchids and chrysanthemums all at once. The logic was simple: you have two seconds to impress someone who's just arrived from a twelve-hour flight. You don't know what they like. So you give them everything and let them find their favourite inside the arrangement. I use the same logic with Marley. If three out of ten people love roses, three love orchids, and four love chrysanthemums, a sampler arrangement pleases all ten. A rose-only arrangement pleases three. That's why Marley sits in our top three for Seminyak and Ubud, where most orders come from people sending to someone they haven't seen recently."

The White Polaris Chrysanthemum

The white chrysanthemum in the centre of Marley is a polaris variety. Disbud, meaning the grower removed all the side buds from the stem and let all the energy go into one bloom. That's why it's the size it is. A regular chrysanthemum produces five or six smaller heads. A disbud produces one enormous one. The petals are packed tight in concentric circles and the bloom holds its round shape for over a week.

It does the same job here that it does in Alesha: gives the eye a place to rest. In a multi-colour arrangement with five competing tones, the white chrysanthemum is the neutral pause. Your eye lands on it, settles, then moves outward to the roses and orchids. Without it, the colours fight each other. With it, they orbit around a calm centre.

The Lisianthus

Most people don't recognise lisianthus by name. They see it and think it's a rose or a small peony. The petals have the same ruffled, layered quality. But lisianthus is a different flower entirely and it does something in an arrangement that roses cannot do. It opens slowly. A lisianthus bud on day one is a tight spiral. By day three the outer petals unfurl. By day five it's a full double bloom that looks like it belongs in a bridal bouquet. The roses in Marley will peak and soften while the lisianthus is still opening.

They're also taller than the roses, which is why they sit in the upper section, reaching toward the blade leaves and cattail. That height gives Marley its vertical reach without needing to rely entirely on foliage for structure.

Ay Ayu Owner, Sunny Florist Bali

"Lisianthus is the flower I wish more people asked for by name. It looks expensive. It photographs like a garden rose. And it lasts longer than actual roses by three or four days, sometimes more. But because nobody knows the name, it never gets the credit. People look at Marley and say they love the roses. Then I point to the lisianthus and they realise the flower they were admiring wasn't a rose at all. It happens at least once a week. I put lisianthus in Marley specifically because this is the arrangement that introduces people to flowers they didn't know they liked."

The Orchids and Roses Together

The red roses and the purple orchids sit at the same height in the mid-lower section but they work differently. The roses are round, dense, velvety. The orchids are open, angular, vivid with white throats. Placing them side by side in the same zone creates the widest colour contrast in the arrangement. Red and purple are adjacent on the colour wheel but the textures are so different that they read as opposites.

That contrast is what makes the lower section feel rich. Remove either the roses or the orchids and the mid-section becomes ordinary. Keep both and you get that dense, layered quality that makes people pick up their phone and photograph it the moment it arrives.

Who Sends Marley

The person who needs to send something impressive and doesn't have time to overthink the choice. Marley is the default for birthdays, celebrations, thank-yous, welcome gifts, and every other occasion that calls for colour and variety. It is our third most ordered arrangement to both Seminyak and Ubud, and consistently popular across Nusa Dua, Jimbaran, and Sanur.

International senders choose Marley because the variety translates across every taste. Expats in Batu Bolong and Ungasan reorder it because the mix changes subtly each time depending on what's freshest at the market that morning. No two Marleys are identical in their exact bloom count, which means repeat orders still feel like a surprise.

At $47.00 USD, seven flower types including roses, orchids, a full polaris chrysanthemum, lisianthus, spray chrysanthemums, plus a cattail and blade leaves. A florist in Sydney would charge $90 or more for the same flower count.

Pair with chocolates and a hamper or a Bali candle. For a bolder tropical option, see Farah. For the colour-coordinated alternative, try Sami.

Care

Top up the foam with water daily. The roses will peak on day two or three. The orchids hold past a week. The lisianthus is still opening while the roses are finishing, so the arrangement evolves rather than simply fading. Remove spent roses and the chrysanthemums, orchids, and lisianthus fill the gaps. The polaris chrysanthemum in the centre is the last to go. The cattail and blade leaves hold indefinitely.

Keep out of direct sun. The red roses hold their colour better than pinks or pastels in heat, but the lisianthus prefers indirect light to open at its best.

Delivery

Same day delivery, seven days a week, everywhere we reach across Bali. Seminyak, Ubud, Canggu, Denpasar, 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 rose collection and bestsellers. More about who makes your flowers on our About Us page.

Similar Products