Any suggestions on restoring such arrangements, and dusting them in general?
Blowing on them, or feather dusting, only gets the surface dust. They are
far too delicate to vacuum them.
- David D.
You may just be assuming that the arrangements are delicate. If they are
really "silk" flowers, they are made of sturdy polyester fabric and are
quite durable. I have a number of these arrangement. Periodically, I
vacuum them or give them a good blast of air from my air compressor. For a
more thorough cleaning there are several alternatives. If you have a steam
cleaner, you can use that. Simply direct the steam to the leaves and
flowers. You can use a clean cloth to wipe large flat areas to assist is
removing the dirt. The flowers will dry very quickly. You may have to
repeat this a few times until they are very clean. I did this recently to
an arrangement and it worked fairly well.
The method that works best for me is to put some liquid dish detergent and
water into a spray bottle and spray the flowers, thoroughly saturating
everything. Then I use a hand-held sprayer (or garden hose if outside) and
gently rinse them. I hold the arrangement upside down when rinsing to keep
the water away from the container. I then shake them off and leave them
outside to dry in the sun. I have some large ledge garden arrangements that
I actually put in the shower. They get a good spray with the dish detergent
as above, then I use the hand-held shower to rinse them. I don't have to
worry about water accumulating in a container as the arrangements are built
on slabs of floral foam. It is amazing to see how much dirt rinses off them!
An alternative way to clean them is to fill a sink or other large, deep
container with warm soapy water. Dip the arrangement (upside down) into the
water and swish it around. Remove and let it drip and then repeat with
clear water to rinse. It is best to wash the arrangements on warm, sunny
days when there is a good breeze-
You can also buy cleaners in spray cans specifically designed for silk
arrangement. These sprays contain a fast drying solvent. You simply spray
the arrangement and let it dry. The sprays are OK, but not as good as
simply washing the flowers. The sprays can be found anywhere that sells
silk flowers like craft stores (Michael's, Hobby Lobby, Garden Ridge).
Of course, you can't use water on dried natural materials or with paper
flowers. Before cleaning the arrangements, turn them upside down and shake
a few times to make sure that they are constructed well.
Place all your artificial flowers in a brown paper sack. Put a 1/8 of a cup
of table salt in the bag with your arrangements. Fold the top down,step
outside and vigorously shake bag to where you can hear the salt hitting all
inside the bag.
Take each flower or arrangement out and shake out the salt. They look like
brand new flowers. All your dust and lent particles are then in the bag with
the remainder of the salt.
"Vox Humana" <vhu...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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- David
"Home Essentials" <bsand...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
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--
Ms E Quin - eliquint designs
quin the crafter at columbus dot rr dot com
"Home Essentials" <bsand...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:Wu-dnVAGlOB...@fidnet.com...
--
Ms E Quin - eliquint designs
quin the crafter at columbus dot rr dot com
"David D." <daviddiamond.re...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:LJWdnV-vtpW...@comcast.com...
I know you were talking about silk flowers, but I also have a number of silk
foliage plants -- large ones like artificial palms and ficus trees. I just
put them in the bathtub and run the shower over them. I have an extra
shower head on a flexible hose that I use for my hair, and I also use it on
the foliage plants. Works great! Let the plant drip dry, and it's ready to
go.
MaryL