Floral Wreaths gives your team a proper making session, not a lecture with a few stems at the end. Guests sit down with fresh seasonal foliage and flowers, then learn how to turn loose natural materials into a decorative wreath with shape, movement and balance. The mood changes quickly once the tables are covered in greenery. People start swapping pieces, holding up half-finished work, and asking if that gap on the left is charming or deeply suspicious.
The workshop is built around the season. In spring, the focus can lean into fresher tones and lighter textures. Autumn brings richer colours, seed heads and foliage with a bit more drama. At Christmas, the wreath becomes the sort of thing people want on a front door, mantelpiece or table. The exact look comes from the materials in front of the group and the choices each person makes, so the finished wreaths never feel like copies of one another.
The session runs for two hours, which gives the activity enough breathing room. The hosts begin by showing the basic method, explaining how to place foliage, build fullness and create a pleasing shape. Then everyone gets stuck in. They handle the stems, turn the wreath as they work, fill the gaps, check the outline, and adjust until it feels right. It is practical, gentle and surprisingly absorbing.
This is a good fit for teams that need a change of pace. It works well when people have been in meetings all day and need to do something with their hands instead of staring at another screen. It also suits mixed groups, because the task is easy to enter but still satisfying to refine. The competitive ones will quietly try to make the neatest wreath in the room. The sceptics usually soften once they realise there is a clear structure to follow. The quiet ones can work at their own rhythm without being put on display.
There is plenty of conversation, but it does not have to be manufactured. People naturally ask what a certain flower is, compare the angle of a sprig, or laugh about a wreath that has developed a personality of its own. That makes it useful for team building, client hosting, fundraisers and evening parties. It gives guests a shared focus and a reason to talk, while still letting them leave with something they made themselves.
The finished wreath is part of the appeal. It is not a token item destined for a drawer. Guests can display it at home, use it as seasonal decoration, or give it to someone else. That small sense of ownership matters. Your team has chosen the materials, learned the technique, solved the little design problems and made the final call on when it is finished.
We bring the workshop to life with expert hosts who guide the group from first stem to finished wreath. They explain the process clearly, keep an eye on the room, and help anyone who gets stuck without taking over the making. Your team does not need to arrive with skills, tools or a plan. They just turn up, take a seat and start creating. We set up the activity and run it on the day, so you can enjoy watching the room settle into that lovely mix of focus, chatter and floral faff.








