This is a creative floristry workshop built around fresh flowers, foliage and plenty of hands-on making. Your team is shown how a floral crown comes together, from choosing the materials to shaping the structure and adding the finishing touches. It is not a lecture, and it is not a craft table left in the corner. An expert florist leads the session, explains the practical bits clearly, and keeps the room moving at a comfortable pace.
The workshop starts with the materials in front of the group and a simple introduction to what each stem can do. Some flowers give colour, some add height, some soften the outline, and the foliage helps everything feel full rather than fussy. People learn to look at texture, shape and tone before they start attaching anything. That small pause matters. It gives the team a shared starting point and helps even the less confident makers see a route into the task.
Once the basics are covered, everyone begins building their own crown. Hands get busy with stems, foliage and the structure of the piece. The florist shows how to place flowers so they face the right way, how to keep the design balanced, and how to avoid putting all the best bits in the first three inches. There is room for personal style, too. One person might go neat and delicate, another might build something with more colour and height.
The atmosphere is sociable, but not forced. People can talk as they work, ask for a second opinion, or quietly concentrate on their own design. That is one of the nice things about Floral Crowns. It gives confident people something to play with, and it gives quieter people a reason to join the conversation without being put on the spot. The crown takes shape bit by bit, so the room gets a steady run of small wins.
It works well for corporate team building because nobody needs floristry experience to take part. The skill is taught in the session, and the activity is practical enough to keep people engaged. It also suits charity fundraisers and evening parties where you want an activity that looks good, feels relaxed and gives guests something to take away. The finished crowns naturally become part of the event. People try them on, compare designs and, usually, start taking photos without needing much encouragement.
The creative side is useful, but the real value is in how people behave around the table. They share materials, swap ideas, copy a trick that worked, and help rescue a flower that has gone rogue. There is no need for a big competitive reveal unless you want that feel. The focus is on making something personal, learning a few floristry basics, and giving your team a shared experience that does not involve screens, slides or awkward role play.
We provide the guided workshop and the floristry know-how needed to run it properly on the day. Your team gets clear instruction on flower selection, colour choices and crown-building techniques, with support as they make their own piece. You bring the people and the occasion. We help shape the session around the room, the mood and the type of event you are planning, so it feels considered rather than bolted on.








