Florists in Mattituck, NY
Find local Mattituck, New York florists below that deliver beautiful flowers to residences, business, funeral homes and hospitals in Mattituck and surrounding areas. Choose from roses, lilies, tulips, orchids, carnations and more from the variety of flower arrangements in a vase, container or basket. Place your flower delivery order online of call.
Mattituck Flower Shops
13100 Main Rd Ste 25
Mattituck, NY 11952
(631) 298-5840
Mattituck NY News
Mar 29, 2019How two sisters formed Laurel Floral out of a backyard - Suffolk Times
We know how to cater to people’s needs that makes them feel appreciated.”
The duo previously worked at Love Lane Kitchen in Mattituck. Christi said owner Carolyn Iannone has offered them guidance on running a business.
“She’s given us a lot of advice in terms of how to manage money and plan now, so problems don’t arise in the future,” Christi said. “We disagree on things, but we go back, talk and work it out.”
When she’s not working with her husband’s contracting company or taking care of their three children, Laura designs custom shirts, party invitations and other personalized apparel a la carte.
Christi said the pair is scouting for a retail storefront on the North Fork. Once a formal storefront is open, they’ll consider merging the apparel and floral design businesses.
“That’s why we wanted to do the shop,” Christi said. “Eventually, who knows where that might lead us.”
Laura said the company aims to guide a “build your own arrangement” class later this month. The business is also planning on offering discounts to college or high school students around Mother’s Day.
“Working locally, you develop relationships, you know? That sets you apart from other businesses, because you want to make people truly happy with what you do,” Christi said.
Bouquets are available online via Instagram or by contacting Christi Carrillo at 631-680-0449.
Caption: Christi (left) and Laura Carrillo of Laurel registered their floral catering business, Laurel Floral Design, last month. They are both taking floral design classes at Western Suffolk BOCES. (Credit: Kate Nalepinski)
[email protected]
Comments comments
...
May 7, 2017Flowers for Every Month
I was surprised to find a group of hydrangeas, lush with velvety purple leaves, in Dennis Schrader and Bill Smith’s garden in Mattituck. We don’t expect this type of hydrangea, H. aspera, from the mountains of China, to be vigorous and hardy in our climate, but there they were, in shade and shielded from wind. Called Plum Passion, it was discovered and introduced by Dan Hinkley for Monrovia (carried by local garden centers), and is a must-have shrub.Also from China is a trumpet vine, Campsis grandiflora Morning Calm, with very large peach flowers with yellow throats. Thanks to climate change it has become hardy here. Unlike the invasive, suckering, clinging native trumpet vine that rips shingles off buildings, Morning Calm behaves itself. At Swarthmore College it shares a strong upright 4-by-4 with a clematis in the sun; in my garden it is establishing itself well, growing on a native Virginia cedar in partial sun.Two very handsome butterfly bushes, again from China, are far better than those we are familiar with. Both begin flowering in July and continue for months. The weeping butterfly bush, Buddleia lindleyana, has two-foot-long panicles of purple-lilac flowers and interesting cinnamon peeling bark. The second, B. nivea, makes a large shrub (8 to 12 feet) with showy large leaves covered in white down with light pink flowers. Both are available from Landcraft Environments, so ask your garden center to order them.Three plants are especially valued in autumn. One is increasingly being used as a relatively deer-proof hedge, the false holly, Osmanthus heterophyllus. It flowers in October and November. You might not notice the clusters of small white flowers until the perfume captures your attention. In June the bushes are covered with fruit that looks like olives and is devoured by flocks of birds that swoop down and strip the plants bare.In Japan, just as they have spring cherry blossom festivals, in October they celebrate the flowering of bush clover, lespedeza. The large and sprawling bushes with lavender flowers are the most popular and arresting, but I prefer in a small garden situation the white form that is upright and elegant.The seven-son flower, Heptacodium, is my third choice for autumn for its spectacular clusters of red fruit in October, not for its flowers, which are small, white, and open in August. Walk into any garden in October and heptacodium competes, even outcompetes, the most brilliant foliage around.In winter there are trees and shrubs that blossom from Christmas through March, except when covered with snow or we are in a deep freeze. Witch hazels and winter honeysuckle shrubs are the ma... (East Hampton Star)
Jan 8, 2016Robert G. Rowehl, 86
Robert G. Rowehl of Mattituck died at his home on December 15, 2015. He was 86 years old.
He was born in Hicksville, L.I. on February 25, 1929 to Diedrick and Beatrice (nee Wetterau) Rowehl. On May 20, 1950, he married Bertha M. (nee James) in Hicksville.
Formerly of Middle Island, he was an Ex-chief (1966-67) and former commissioner of the Middle Island Fire Department and a member of the Mattituck Fire Department.
He served on the Long Island Farm Bureau Board of Directors and was the 1991 Long Island Farm Bureau-Farmer Citizen of the Year. He also served on the New York Farm Bureau Committee and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.
Predeceased by his wife Bertha M. Rowehl on February 6, 2008; he is survived by his children and their spouses: Jean and Bill Roberson, James and Rebecca Rowehl, John and Jane Rowehl, Susan and Carl Krieg, Marie and Serge Desjardins and Karen Rowehl and Pete Raynor; and sixteen grandchildren and three great-grandsons.
Frie... (SoutholdLOCAL)