12 Pink And White Rose Bunch
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Description
Twelve roses in alternating pink and white, hand-tied with baby's breath and fern foliage. This is the first mixed-colour rose bunch in the collection and the only product where two rose colours share a single bouquet. At $38 it matches the price of a dozen single-colour roses but delivers something no single colour can: a bouquet that reads as a deliberate gift in every context. Eighth most popular product across all of Bali, first to Nusa Dua.
$38.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Kuta, Ubud, Denpasar and Legian. Twelve pink and white roses arrive hand-tied as a bunch with baby's breath and fern foliage.
What Arrives
Twelve roses in a mix of soft pink and cream-white, hand-tied into a rounded dome. The pink roses are a warm medium shade and the white roses are a soft cream rather than a stark bleached white. They alternate through the bunch so no two roses of the same colour sit next to each other. Scattered through the spaces between blooms are small clusters of baby's breath, the tiny white spray flowers that add a cloud-like texture to the gaps. At the base of the bunch sits a collar of green fern fronds, fine and feathery, wrapping the lower section where the stems converge. The product photo shows the bunch displayed in a clear glass vase. The vase is for display purposes. The product arrives as a hand-tied bunch and the recipient provides the vase.
Why a $38 Product is Number One in Nusa Dua
Nusa Dua is the most expensive resort corridor in Bali. The Mulia, The Apurva Kempinski, The St. Regis, Sofitel. Rooms start at three hundred dollars a night and suites run well past a thousand. The guests can afford anything. The gift shops inside these resorts sell flower arrangements for double or triple what any online florist charges. And yet the number one product ordered to Nusa Dua from our shop is not the $140 sixty-rose dome or the $92 vase combo. It is twelve roses for thirty-eight dollars.
The price is not what sells it. The colour combination is. Pink and white together is the one combination that works in every Nusa Dua context without the sender having to think about it. Red roses to a resort room says romance, which is wrong if the flowers are from a friend or a parent or a colleague. All-pink says romance-adjacent, which still carries ambiguity. All-white in a resort context can read as part of the hotel decor rather than as a personal gift. Pink and white together reads as thoughtful, warm, and clearly a deliberate gift rather than something the hotel placed there.
That last point matters more than it sounds. In a luxury resort room that already has white orchids on the bathroom counter and frangipani on the pillows, a bunch of white roses risks blending in. The guest walks in and does not register the delivery as a gift. It looks like another hotel amenity. The pink breaks that pattern. Pink is not a resort colour. Pink and white together on a bedside table or desk reads instantly as "someone sent these for you" rather than "the hotel put these here."
A woman in Sydney sent me a WhatsApp message at midnight Bali time asking to order flowers for her mother who was checking into The Mulia the next morning. Her mother was turning seventy and the daughter could not be there. She said she had been looking at the site for an hour and asked me which product I would choose. I asked what she wanted her mother to feel when she walked into the room. She said "like I thought about her." Not impressed. Not overwhelmed. Just thought about. I told her this one. Twelve pink and white roses. She hesitated. She said "is that enough? She's at The Mulia." I told her that at The Mulia, the room already looks expensive. The furniture is polished. The linens are pressed. Everything is designed to impress. The last thing her mother needed was another thing trying to impress her. What she needed was something that looked personal. Something soft. Something that did not match the room because it was not from the hotel. She ordered it. Two days later she sent me a screenshot of her mother's reply. Her mother had photographed the roses on the desk and sent back one word: "Crying." Thirty-eight dollars. The daughter told me it was the best money she had ever spent on a gift.
Baby's Breath Changes the Bouquet
Most of the rose products in this collection use salal leaves and rose foliage as the supporting greenery. This is the first product that uses baby's breath. The difference matters. Baby's breath adds volume without adding weight. The tiny white flowers fill the gaps between rose blooms with a soft haze that makes twelve roses look like twenty from across a room. The clusters sit at the same height as the roses rather than below them, so the whole bunch reads as a single rounded cloud of pink, white, and tiny white dots rather than as individual roses with green filler underneath.
The fern foliage at the base does a different job. The fine fronds create a feathered edge where the bunch meets the stems, softening the transition from flower to stem. In the other rose bunches, salal leaves create a hard green line below the blooms. The fern dissolves that edge. The result is a bouquet that looks lighter and more relaxed than a twelve-rose bunch normally does. It has a garden quality to it rather than a florist-shop quality, which is part of why it works so well in Nusa Dua resort rooms where the aesthetic is organic and natural rather than stiff and formal.
Same Price, Different Effect
The 12 Red Roses Bunch costs $38. The 12 Pink Roses costs $38. This product also costs $38. Same stem count, same price point, completely different result. Red delivers certainty. All-pink delivers softness. Pink and white together delivers something neither single colour can manage on its own: a bouquet that looks composed rather than uniform. The alternating colours create visual rhythm across the dome. The baby's breath fills the transitions. The fern grounds the base. Three separate elements working together rather than twelve of the same thing in a bundle.
The choice between these three dozen-rose options comes down to what the sender wants the recipient to feel. Red says romance. All-pink says warmth. Pink and white says "someone took the time to choose something that would look right in any room, for any reason." That versatility is why this product outsells both the red bunch and the pink bunch in resort areas where the sender often does not know the room decor, the occasion tone, or how the recipient will interpret a single bold colour.
Alternating the colours is slower than it sounds. With a single-colour bunch, Ayu grabs twelve stems, arranges them in a spiral, and ties. With this product, she lays out six pink and six white on the bench and picks them up one at a time, alternating as she builds the spiral. Pink, white, pink, white. If she picks up two pinks in a row, she has to undo the last stem and replace it. The alternation has to hold from every viewing angle, including the sides. A customer looking at the bunch from the side should see the same pink-white-pink-white rhythm as someone looking from above. That means Ayu rotates the bunch a quarter turn after every three stems to check the pattern from four directions. The whole process takes about twice as long as a single-colour bunch. But the pattern is what makes the product. A random scatter of pink and white roses in a vase looks careless. An even alternation looks deliberate. The difference between those two is about four extra minutes of assembly time and it is the reason this product photographs well enough to rank eighth across all of Bali.
Who Sends This
Parents and children sending to family in Nusa Dua resorts. Birthday senders who want roses that read as celebration rather than romance. Friends sending a get-well or thinking-of-you gesture where red would be too intense. Anniversary couples who prefer soft tones over classic red. International senders from Australia and Singapore ordering to Sanur, Jimbaran, Berawa, and Pererenan who want twelve roses that work for any occasion without overthinking the colour choice.
For single-colour roses, see the full rose range. For roses with bears or chocolates, browse the gifts collection. For foam arrangements that arrive ready to display without a vase, see the arrangement range.
Care
Place in a vase with fresh water immediately on arrival. A medium-width vase works best for twelve stems. Trim half a centimetre from each stem at a diagonal. Strip all foliage and baby's breath below the waterline because submerged baby's breath clouds the water faster than submerged leaves do. Change the water every two days. The pink and white roses open at slightly different rates. The pinks tend to open half a day ahead of the whites, which means the bouquet shifts subtly in appearance over the first three days as different blooms hit their peak at different times. By day four the whole bunch should be in full bloom. Expect five to six days of vase life in a cool indoor spot away from direct sunlight.
Delivery
Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. Seven days a week including Sundays and holidays. Delivery to Umalas, Kerobokan, Tabanan, Gianyar, Pecatu and everywhere in between. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.