Very good tutorial from a professional garden...
I have subscribed to access all the courses so have watched one on interior design and this one with Butter Wakefield who specialises in small garden design. She ...
Louise Brown
Apr 10, 2026
Learn the Art of Flower Pressing
with JAMJAR EDIT — Renowned florists and flower pressing studio specialising in unique nature-inspired homewares.
Lesson 21 of 23
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For your final project of the course, you’ll combine all your newly learnt skills and techniques to create a lampshade adorned with pressed flowers.
There are lots of imaginative ways to use your pressed flowers, and in this lesson, you will learn how to apply them to a lampshade.
Good stems to use:
Pansy - very flexible and easy to work with
Butterfly Ranunculus - pretty iridescent petals
Virginia Creeper - just use the leaves
Dicentra - beautiful structure and flexible
Avoid:
Keep it simple and don't overcomplicate it, as this can start to look too twee and a bit old-fashioned. We would recommend sticking to one species of flower.
Step 1: Prepare small strips of masking tape using scissors or a scalpel. Stick them onto your hand or clothing - this removes some of the tacks and also means they are easy to grab when you need them.
Step 2: Take your lampshade and your first stem, and play around with different orientations and placements. Try not to bend or manipulate the stem too much - celebrate its natural shape and allow your composition to follow its movement.
Step 3: When you have found a pleasing placement, use strips of masking tape to keep it in position. Be careful not to stick tape to the petals, as this could tear them.
Step 4: Continue adding subsequent stems and experimenting with the positioning - try to create a fluid arrangement that looks attractive all the way around. Tape stems in place as you go, you can always adjust and move them as you work your way around.
Step 5: You can fill any blank spaces with single leaves or individual flowers you have pressed separately. Similarly, if you find a leaf to be too big you can remove it and replace it with a smaller one.
Step 6: Once you are happy with the positioning, trim any stems that trail off the lampshade. For a neat finish, it's nice for them to sit within the lampshade trim.
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437 reviews
Read moreI have subscribed to access all the courses so have watched one on interior design and this one with Butter Wakefield who specialises in small garden design. She ...
Louise Brown
Apr 10, 2026
I love CreateAcademy. I came in for the gardening and floristry courses, but am also watching an interior design one at present. And the photography course is an ...
Wellesley
Apr 1, 2026
What a great investment, I have learned such a lot from the first three courses. My evenings have gone from not being able to find anything that captured my imagi...
sojojo
Mar 30, 2026
I loved this course with Amanda Lindroth! Her approach to decorating is so relaxed and she makes it feel attainable. She explains the reasons behind her decisions...
Elizabeth
Mar 27, 2026
I have subscribed to access all the courses so have watched one on interior design and this one with Butter Wakefield who specialises in small garden design. She has a lovely personality and comes across as ...
Louise Brown
Apr 10, 2026
I love CreateAcademy. I came in for the gardening and floristry courses, but am also watching an interior design one at present. And the photography course is an absolute must, best I've ever done.
Wellesley
Apr 1, 2026
What a great investment, I have learned such a lot from the first three courses. My evenings have gone from not being able to find anything that captured my imagination on TV to learning and expanding my kno...
sojojo
Mar 30, 2026
Your Instructor
Renowned florists and flower pressing studio specialising in unique nature-inspired homewares.
JamJar Edit is a seasonally led floral design studio with an online edit of artwork and curated homewares. Inspired by the Sussex garden and woods that surrounded her childhood home, JamJar Flowers was founded by Melissa Richardson in 2009, with her signature style reflecting the simple charm of seasonal British flowers artfully arranged in jam jars. From these uncomplicated beginnings, JamJar Flowers has become one of London's leading florists. Melissa went on to create JamJar Edit with co-founder Amy Fielding in 2017; beginning as an eclectic collection of botanically inspired homewares and now an innovative design studio specialising in creating pressed flower artworks, from single stem framed pieces and private commissions, to ambitious installations and exhibitions. Their book, The Modern Flower Press, is the go-to-guide for pressing flowers in the 21st century.
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