May 1, 2025
The Bloom Central flower delivery of the month for May in Old Westbury is the All For You Bouquet
The All For You Bouquet from Bloom Central is an absolute delight! Bursting with happiness and vibrant colors, this floral arrangement is sure to bring joy to anyone's day. With its simple yet stunning design, it effortlessly captures the essence of love and celebration.
Featuring a graceful assortment of fresh flowers, including roses, lilies, sunflowers, and carnations, the All For You Bouquet exudes elegance in every petal. The carefully selected blooms come together in perfect harmony to create a truly mesmerizing display. It's like sending a heartfelt message through nature's own language!
Whether you're looking for the perfect gift for your best friend's birthday or want to surprise someone dear on their anniversary, this bouquet is ideal for any occasion. Its versatility allows it to shine as both a centerpiece at gatherings or as an eye-catching accent piece adorning any space.
What makes the All For You Bouquet truly exceptional is not only its beauty but also its longevity. Crafted by skilled florists using top-quality materials ensures that these blossoms will continue spreading cheer long after they arrive at their destination.
So go ahead - treat yourself or make someone feel extra special today! The All For You Bouquet promises nothing less than sheer joy packaged beautifully within radiant petals meant exclusively For You.
We have beautiful floral arrangements and lively green plants that make the perfect gift for an anniversary, birthday, holiday or just to say I'm thinking about you. We can make a flower delivery to anywhere in Old Westbury NY including hospitals, businesses, private homes, places of worship or public venues. Orders may be placed up to a month in advance or as late 1PM on the delivery date if you've procrastinated just a bit.
Two of our most popular floral arrangements are the Stunning Beauty Bouquet (which includes stargazer lilies, purple lisianthus, purple matsumoto asters, red roses, lavender carnations and red Peruvian lilies) and the Simply Sweet Bouquet (which includes yellow roses, lavender daisy chrysanthemums, pink asiatic lilies and light yellow miniature carnations). Either of these or any of our dozens of other special selections can be ready and delivered by your local Old Westbury florist today!
Would you prefer to place your flower order in person rather than online? Here are a few Old Westbury florists to visit:
Amaranthus on Main
162 Main St
Port Washington, NY 11050
Artistry In Flowers
50 Glen Cove Rd
Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
Baron Floral Designs
14 Mary Ln
Greenvale, NY 11548
Boos Floral Showcase
38 W Village Green
Hicksville, NY 11801
Diva Flowers
1077 Willis Ave
Albertson, NY 11507
Mineola Florist & Gift Shop
143 Mineola Blvd
Mineola, NY 11501
The Village Flower Shoppe
14 Hillside Ave
Williston Park, NY 11596
Tommy Flowers 2
231 Robbins Ln
Syosset, NY 11791
Verbena Designs
347 W John St
Hicksville, NY 11801
Westbury Florist
53 Post Ave
Westbury, NY 11590
Many of the most memorable moments in life occur in places of worship. Make those moments even more memorable by sending a gift of fresh flowers. We deliver to all churches in the Old Westbury NY area including:
Chabad Of Old Westbury
267 Glen Cove Road
Old Westbury, NY 11568
Old Westbury Hebrew Congregation
21 Old Westbury Road
Old Westbury, NY 11568
Whether you are looking for casket spray or a floral arrangement to send in remembrance of a lost loved one, our local florist will hand deliver flowers that are befitting the occasion. We deliver flowers to all funeral homes near Old Westbury NY including:
Austin F Knowles
128 Main St
Port Washington, NY 11050
Beney Funeral Home
79 Berry Hill Rd
Syosset, NY 11791
Cassidy Funeral Home
156 Willis Ave
Mineola, NY 11501
Charles J OShea Funeral Homes
603 Wantagh Ave
Wantagh, NY 11793
Donohue Cecere Funeral Directors
290 Post Ave
Westbury, NY 11590
Fairchild Sons
1570 Northern Blvd
Manhasset, NY 11030
Greaves- Hawkins Memorial Funeral Services
116-08 Merrick Blvd
Jamaica, NY 11434
Mc Laughlin Kramer Funeral Home
220 Glen St
Glen Cove, NY 11542
New Hyde Park Funeral Home
506 Lakeville Rd
New Hyde Park, NY 11040
Park Funeral Chapels
2175 Jericho Tpke
Garden City Park, NY 11040
R Stutzmann & Son
2000 Hillside Ave
New Hyde Park, NY 11040
Roslyn Heights Funeral Home
75 Mineola Ave
Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
Thomas F Dalton Funeral Homes - Levittown
2786 Hempstead Turnpike
Levittown, NY 11756
Thomas F Dalton Funeral Homes - Williston Park
412 Willis Ave
Williston Park, NY 11596
Vernon C. Wagner Funeral Homes
125 W Old Country Rd
Hicksville, NY 11801
Weigand Bros Inc Funeral Homes
49 Hillside Ave
Williston Park, NY 11596
Whitting Funeral Home
300 Glen Cove Ave
Glen Head, NY 11545
William E. Law
1 Jerusalem Ave
Massapequa, NY 11758
Orchids don’t just sit in arrangements ... they interrogate them. Stems arch like question marks, blooms dangling with the poised uncertainty of chandeliers mid-swing, petals splayed in geometries so precise they mock the very idea of randomness. This isn’t floral design. It’s a structural critique. A single orchid in a vase doesn’t complement the roses or lilies ... it indicts them, exposing their ruffled sentimentality as bourgeois kitsch.
Consider the labellum—that landing strip of a petal, often frilled, spotted, or streaked like a jazz-age flapper’s dress. It’s not a petal. It’s a trap. A siren song for pollinators, sure, but in your living room? A dare. Pair orchids with peonies, and the peonies bloat. Pair them with succulents, and the succulents shrink into arid afterthoughts. The orchid’s symmetry—bilateral, obsessive, the kind that makes Fibonacci sequences look lazy—doesn’t harmonize. It dominates.
Color here is a con. The whites aren’t white. They’re light trapped in wax. The purples vibrate at frequencies that make delphiniums seem washed out. The spotted varieties? They’re not patterns. They’re Rorschach tests. What you see says more about you than the flower. Cluster phalaenopsis in a clear vase, and the room tilts. Add a dendrobium, and the tilt becomes a landslide.
Longevity is their quiet rebellion. While cut roses slump after days, orchids persist. Stems hoist blooms for weeks, petals refusing to wrinkle, colors clinging to saturation like existentialists to meaning. Leave them in a hotel lobby, and they’ll outlast the check-in desk’s faux marble, the concierge’s patience, the potted ferns’ slow death by fluorescent light.
They’re shape-shifters with range. A cymbidium’s spray of blooms turns a dining table into a opera stage. A single cattleya in a bud vase makes your IKEA shelf look curated by a Zen monk. Float a vanda’s roots in glass, and the arrangement becomes a biology lesson ... a critique of taxonomy ... a silent jab at your succulents’ lack of ambition.
Scent is optional. Some orchids smell of chocolate, others of rotting meat (though we’ll focus on the former). This duality isn’t a flaw. It’s a lesson in context. The right orchid in the right room doesn’t perfume ... it curates. Vanilla notes for the minimalist. Citrus bursts for the modernist. Nothing for the purist who thinks flowers should be seen, not smelled.
Their roots are the subplot. Aerial, serpentine, they spill from pots like frozen tentacles, mocking the very idea that beauty requires soil. In arrangements, they’re not hidden. They’re featured—gray-green tendrils snaking around crystal, making the vase itself seem redundant. Why contain what refuses to be tamed?
Symbolism clings to them like humidity. Victorian emblems of luxury ... modern shorthand for “I’ve arrived” ... biohacker decor for the post-plant mom era. None of that matters when you’re staring down a paphiopedilum’s pouch-like lip, a structure so biomechanical it seems less evolved than designed.
When they finally fade (months later, probably), they do it without fanfare. Petals crisp at the edges, stems yellowing like old parchment. But even then, they’re sculptural. Keep them. A spent orchid spike on a bookshelf isn’t failure ... it’s a semicolon. A promise that the next act is already backstage, waiting for its cue.
You could default to hydrangeas, to daisies, to flowers that play nice. But why? Orchids refuse to be background. They’re the uninvited guest who critiques the wallpaper, rewrites the playlist, and leaves you wondering why you ever bothered with roses. An arrangement with them isn’t decor. It’s a dialectic. Proof that sometimes, the most extraordinary beauty isn’t just seen ... it argues.