Let me tell you why

I Turned Flowers Into a Career

Here's the thing: I never planned to be a floral designer and educator. I was just someone who discovered that flowers made me happy. Flowers was my escape from (previously) stressful banking job, and honestly? I got a little obsessed.

I teach the floral techniques I needed when I started: approachable, practical, and refreshingly free of stiff, technical rules. My classes and bouquets are for people who love flowers. And that's it. No other requirements. 

Flowers aren't about perfect bouquets or making them last forever. It's about enjoying the process and understanding that the beauty of flowers is in their fleeting nature. Working with flowers gives you permission to slow down, to be present, to make something with your hands without needing it to be perfect or productive. And in that small window of time, arranging flowers becomes a way to breathe, to reset, and to reconnect with yourself.

+10,000

Bouquets made

+4,000

floral students

Best at teaching people who insist they're 'not creative enough to arrange flowers'

Beyond flowers

woman in black tank top and black leggings doing yoga
woman in black tank top and black leggings doing yoga
a pair of feet on a black surface
a pair of feet on a black surface
a person standing on a yoga mat on the floor
a person standing on a yoga mat on the floor

Outside the studio, I'm usually trying to keep up with my toddler at the zoo / Sentosa / airport, planning our next holiday, or convincing my friends that we really need to try that new restaurant that just opened.