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April 1, 2025

Bath April Floral Selection


The Bloom Central flower delivery of the month for April in Bath is the Blooming Visions Bouquet

April flower delivery item for Bath

The Blooming Visions Bouquet from Bloom Central is just what every mom needs to brighten up her day! Bursting with an array of vibrant flowers, this bouquet is sure to put a smile on anyone's face.

With its cheerful mix of lavender roses and purple double lisianthus, the Blooming Visions Bouquet creates a picture-perfect arrangement that anyone would love. Its soft hues and delicate petals exude elegance and grace.

The lovely purple button poms add a touch of freshness to the bouquet, creating a harmonious balance between the pops of pink and the lush greens. It's like bringing nature's beauty right into your home!

One thing anyone will appreciate about this floral arrangement is how long-lasting it can be. The blooms are carefully selected for their high quality, ensuring they stay fresh for days on end. This means you can enjoy their beauty each time you walk by.

Not only does the Blooming Visions Bouquet look stunning, but it also has a wonderful fragrance that fills the room with sweetness. This delightful aroma adds an extra layer of sensory pleasure to your daily routine.

What sets this bouquet apart from others is its simplicity - sometimes less truly is more! The sleek glass vase allows all eyes to focus solely on the gorgeous blossoms inside without any distractions.

No matter who you are looking to surprise or help celebrate a special day there's no doubt that gifting them with Bloom Central's Blooming Visions Bouquet will make their heart skip a beat (or two!). So why wait? Treat someone special today and bring some joy into their world with this enchanting floral masterpiece!

Bath OH Flowers


If you want to make somebody in Bath happy today, send them flowers!

You can find flowers for any budget
There are many types of flowers, from a single rose to large bouquets so you can find the perfect gift even when working with a limited budger. Even a simple flower or a small bouquet will make someone feel special.

Everyone can enjoy flowers
It is well known that everyone loves flowers. It is the best way to show someone you are thinking of them, and that you really care. You can send flowers for any occasion, from birthdays to anniversaries, to celebrate or to mourn.

Flowers look amazing in every anywhere
Flowers will make every room look amazingly refreshed and beautiful. They will brighten every home and make people feel special and loved.

Flowers have the power to warm anyone's heart
Flowers are a simple but powerful gift. They are natural, gorgeous and say everything to the person you love, without having to say even a word so why not schedule a Bath flower delivery today?

You can order flowers from the comfort of your home
Giving a gift has never been easier than the age that we live in. With just a few clicks here at Bloom Central, an amazing arrangement will be on its way from your local Bath florist!

Would you prefer to place your flower order in person rather than online? Here are a few Bath florists you may contact:


Every Blooming Thing
1079 W Exchange St
Akron, OH 44313


House Of Plants Florist
1670 Merriman Rd
Akron, OH 44313


Molly Taylor and Company
46 Ravenna St
Hudson, OH 44236


Pam's Posies
110 Merz Blvd
Akron, OH 44333


Pink Petals Florist
1960 W Market St
Akron, OH 44313


Savoir-faire
2309 W Market St
Akron, OH 44313


Seifert's Flower Mill
7360 Wales Ave NW
North Canton, OH 44720


Sisters Flower Haus Two
1245 S Cleveland Massillon Rd
Copley, OH 44321


Smith Brothers Garden Center
1285 N Clevland Massillon Rd
Akron, OH 44333


The Flower Petal
620 E Smith Rd W8
Medina, OH 44256


In difficult times it often can be hard to put feelings into words. A sympathy floral bouquet can provide a visual means to express those feelings of sympathy and respect. Trust us to deliver sympathy flowers to any funeral home in the Bath area including to:


Bogner Family Funeral Home
36625 Center Ridge Rd
North Ridgeville, OH 44039


Busch Funeral and Crematory Services Parma
7501 Ridge Rd
Parma, OH 44129


Cleveland Cremation
5618 Broadview Rd
Parma, OH 44134


Clifford-Shoemaker Funeral Home
1930 Front St
Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44221


Crown Hill Cemetery
8592 Darrow Rd
Twinsburg, OH 44087


Eckard Baldwin Funeral Home & Chapel
760 E Market St
Akron, OH 44305


Ferfolia Funeral Home
356 W Aurora Rd
Sagamore Hills, OH 44067


Hilliard-Rospert Funeral Home
174 N Lyman St
Wadsworth, OH 44281


Humenik Funeral Chapel
14200 Snow Rd
Brookpark, OH 44142


Jardine Funeral Home
15822 Pearl Rd
Strongsville, OH 44136


Kindrich-McHugh Steinbauer Funeral Home
33375 Bainbridge Rd
Solon, OH 44139


Roberts Funeral Home
9560 Acme Rd
Wadsworth, OH 44281


Rose Hill Funeral Home & Burial Park
3653 W Market St
Akron, OH 44333


Shorts-Spicer-Crislip Funeral Home
141 N Meridian St
Ravenna, OH 44266


Stroud-Lawrence Funeral Home
516 E Washington St
Chagrin Falls, OH 44022


Tabone Komorowski Funeral Home
33650 Solon Rd
Solon, OH 44139


Vodrazka Funeral Home
6505 Brecksville Rd
Independence, OH 44131


Waite & Son Funeral Home
3300 Center Rd
Brunswick, OH 44212


A Closer Look at Celosias

Celosias look like something that shouldn’t exist in nature. Like a botanist with an overactive imagination sketched them out in a fever dream and then somehow willed them into reality. They are brain-like, coral-like, fire-like ... velvet turned into a flower. And when you see them in an arrangement, they do not sit quietly in the background, blending in, behaving. They command attention. They change the whole energy of the thing.

This is because Celosias, unlike so many other flowers that are content to be soft and wispy and romantic, are structured. They have presence. The cockscomb variety—the one that looks like a brain, a perfectly sculpted ruffle—stands there like a tiny sculpture, refusing to be ignored. The plume variety, all feathery and flame-like, adds height, drama, movement. And the wheat variety, long and slender and texturally complex, somehow manages to be both wild and elegant at the same time.

But it’s not just the shape that makes them unique. It’s the texture. You touch a Celosia, and it doesn’t feel like a flower. It feels like fabric, like velvet, like something you want to run your fingers over again just to confirm that yes, it really does feel that way. In an arrangement, this does something interesting. Flowers tend to be either soft and delicate or crisp and structured. Celosias are both. They create contrast. They add depth. They make the whole thing feel richer, more layered, more intentional.

And then, of course, there’s the color. Celosias do not come in polite pastels. They are not interested in subtlety. They show up in neon pinks, electric oranges, deep magentas, fire-engine reds. They look saturated, like someone turned the volume all the way up. And when you put them next to something lighter, something airier—Queen Anne’s lace, maybe, or dusty miller, or even a simple white rose—they create this insane vibrancy, this play of light and dark, bold and soft, grounded and ethereal.

Another thing about Celosias: they last. A lot of flowers have a short vase life, a few days of glory before they start wilting, fading, giving in. Not Celosias. They hold their shape, their color, their texture, as if refusing to acknowledge the whole concept of decay. Even when they dry out, they don’t wither into something sad and brittle. They stay beautiful, just in a different way.

If you’re someone who likes their flower arrangements to look traditional, predictable, classic, Celosias might be too much. They bring an energy, an intensity, a kind of visual electricity that doesn’t always play by the usual rules. But if you like contrast, if you like texture, if you want to build something that makes people stop and look twice, Celosias are exactly what you need. They are flowers that refuse to disappear into the background. They are, quite simply, unforgettable.

More About Bath

Are looking for a Bath florist because you are not local to the area? If so, here is a brief travelogue of what Bath has to offer. Who knows, perhaps you'll be intrigued enough to come visit soon, partake in some of the fun activities Bath has to offer and deliver flowers to your loved one in person!

Bath, Ohio, sits quietly in the northern reach of Summit County, a place where the word “suburb” feels both accurate and insufficient. To call it a bedroom community for Akron is to acknowledge a technical truth while missing the essence. The essence involves winding roads that curve like cautious apologies between old-growth trees, houses that seem less built than nestled, and a civic pride so understated it manifests as a kind of serene competence. The air here smells of cut grass and distant bonfires. People wave at passing cars not because they recognize the driver but because the gesture itself feels correct, a small reciprocation of the land’s generosity.

The heart of Bath beats in its parks. Consider the Bath Nature Preserve, 411 acres of wetlands and woods where trails meander with the logic of creekbeds. Schoolchildren on field trips kneel to inspect tadpoles in murky ponds. Retirees in wide-brimmed hats photograph warblers flitting between oak branches. The preserve does not shout its wonders. It whispers, and the whisper carries. On weekends, families spread checkered blankets at Bath Elementary’s playground, where the laughter of children blends with the metallic creak of swing sets. Teenagers shoot hoops at the community center, their sneakers squeaking in rhythms that echo off the brick. There is a sense here that leisure is not an escape but a form of attention, a way to honor what the world offers when you stop hurrying through it.

Same day service available. Order your Bath floral delivery and surprise someone today!



Drive down North Cleveland-Massillon Road, past the historic township hall with its white clapboard and clock tower, and you’ll find the Bath Farmers Market. Vendors arrange heirloom tomatoes in pyramidal stacks. A baker sells sourdough loaves whose crusts crackle like autumn leaves. A potter explains the virtues of local clay to a customer cradling a mug. Conversations here orbit around the weather, the yield of this year’s corn, the sudden proliferation of deer in someone’s backyard. The talk is practical yet suffused with wonder, as if the speakers cannot quite believe their luck at getting to discuss such things.

Bath’s architecture tells its own story. The Ghent Historic District features homes from the 19th century, Greek Revivals with columns like upright cellos, Federal-style houses whose symmetry suggests a moral stance. These structures do not crouch behind hedges. They sit back from the road, patient and open, as if waiting for you to notice the craftsmanship in their shutters, the way their porches gather light. Preservation here is not nostalgia but a kind of stewardship, a promise to maintain a dialogue between past and present.

The community’s pulse quickens during events like the annual Heritage Festival, where residents gather under tents to watch blacksmiths forge iron into tulips. Children pedal tricycles in parades. A librarian reads folktales aloud, her voice rising over the hum of cicadas. The festival feels both meticulously planned and spontaneously alive, a paradox that Bath handles effortlessly. Even the traffic, briefly thickened by visitors, moves with a Midwestern courtesy, drivers yielding at the slightest hesitation of a pedestrian.

What defines Bath is not grandiosity but a sustained commitment to the possible. Volunteers plant native wildflowers along bike paths. Neighbors distribute zucchini from overgrown gardens. High school students tutor younger kids at the library, their patience a quiet rebuttal to every cynical take on Gen Z. The Bath Township Fire Department trains for emergencies everyone hopes will never come. This is a place where the social contract is not theoretical. It’s a living thing, watered daily by small acts of regard.

To visit Bath is to encounter a community that has chosen to be awake to its own life. The choices are deliberate: preserving green space, honoring history, teaching children to pull garlic mustard from forest floors. The result feels less like a utopia than a proof of concept, a demonstration that it’s possible to live with both ambition and care, to want progress without erasing what made you want it in the first place. The sun sets over fields striped gold by late light. Sprinklers hiss. Someone’s wind chimes clink in the breeze. You leave wondering why more places can’t be like this, then realizing, of course, that they could.