
Heavenly Whisper
Soft as a secret, told in petals
Seven blush-pink roses gather close like friends sharing a secret — petals the colour of a blush caught mid-sentence, edges curling open to reveal that deeper rose-gold heart. Pink roses are the soft language of love: gratitude, sweetness, admiration that doesn't need to announce itself. A single deep green leaf peeks through, grounding all that softness, and the entire bouquet is sleeved in cloud-white matte paper folded into careful petals of its own, then sashed with a wide peach satin ribbon that spills like warm light. "Some feelings don't shout — they bloom." Heavenly Whisper is the bouquet for the gentle, unhurried kind of love.
For tender beginnings and unsaid affection
Composed with
- 7 blush-pink roses
- Fresh green foliage
- Layered matte-white wrapping paper
- Peach satin ribbon
Need help choosing?
Tell us the feeling — gratitude, longing, congratulations — and we'll suggest the perfect composition. Message us.
You may also love

Rosetta
One rose. One promise. Nothing else needed.
A single red rose — chosen for its perfect, unbruised head — stands tall inside a sheer cellophane sleeve, dressed in midnight-black crepe petals that flare around the stem like the skirt of a gown. Finished with a slim crimson satin ribbon tied into a soft bow, Rosetta is the bouquet that doesn't need to explain itself. One rose has always meant one thing — "you, and only you" — and the black wrap turns that whisper into a statement: serious, devoted, a little dramatic, deeply romantic. Hand it over on a first date, slip it into the seat of a car, leave it on a pillow. It's the smallest grand gesture in the shop.

Blushing Grace
Soft as a first hello, sweet as a held hand
Ten plump pink rosebuds — each one caught at that perfect, just-about-to-open moment — cluster together like a circle of friends sharing a secret. Their petals carry that impossible bubblegum-pink that looks lit from within, framed by glossy emerald leaves that make the colour sing even louder. Pink roses, in the old floriographies, mean grace, admiration, and a happiness that's still a little shy of itself. The whole bouquet is cradled in two generous wraps of soft rose-pink crepe paper folded into a graceful cone, and finished with a striped grosgrain ribbon in cherry-red and white — the kind of bow that turns a delivery into an occasion. Send it for a first date, a sweet sixteen, a thank-you, or a Tuesday that deserved more than a text.

Elegance Desire
A cathedral of pink roses, carried like a secret
An extravagant gathering of spray roses — dozens of small, perfectly-formed pink heads blooming in tiers along tall emerald stems — rises out of the wrap like a slow exhale. Each cluster carries that soft, candlelit pink that sits exactly between blush and bubblegum: feminine, romantic, a little theatrical. The stems are tall and proudly bare, gathered into a single tight grip and sleeved in crystal-clear cellophane that's folded into a sharp architectural cone, so the whole bouquet reads like a stained-glass window held up to the light. A wide, glossy pink satin ribbon is tied at the throat into a generous double bow, its long tails trailing past the wrist. Spray roses, by tradition, are roses multiplied — admiration in plural, affection said over and over in the same breath. Hand this one across a doorway and you're not whispering a feeling anymore; you're announcing it.