Skip to main content

Simple Beauty: Altar Flowers for the Holy Family

Altar flowers for the Feast of the Holy Family.  Four arrangements in white and gold.  
Carnations, alstroemeria, mums and English laurel greens.  

Some thoughts on simple, uncluttered beauty:

After placing the arrangements on the gradines, my eyes panned round the empty church.  A restoration project is underway: the pews have been removed for refurbishing and the carpet ripped out, revealing the century-old redwood floors.  The nave of the church, now completely bare, in its hallow simplicity, drew my eyes upward to the stained glass windows.  

Their simple beauty is often obscured by the surroundings: a hodgepodge of miscellaneous abandoned items left over from a Church mostly forgotten.  The torn out ambo, the red velvet prie dieus, the colored glass votive candles and the dusty artificial ferns are crowed together uncomfortably in nooks awaiting the rummage sale, the parish hall closet, or the dumpster.

In the absence of all the usual visual distraction, the windows came into focus. They are simple, elegant representations of symbols and devotions. The names of those faithful familes who built this country church are written at the bottom in black.

My altar flowers seemed to nod their little golden heads from the sanctuary in tribute to them and to those whom built the ambo, bought the votives and upholstered the prie dieus.


The pelican is a special symbol for me.  See my post Recovering What Was Lost.









Comments

  1. The flowers were beautiful and perfect for the day, as always. It breaks my heart that the lovely ambo my be re-used in an inappropriate way or even thrown out. I only wish those in charge of these things would remember that they were there for a reason.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Roses for Our Lady: Altar Flowers for the Nativity of the BVM

Altar flowers for the Traditional Latin Mass Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.   Roses, Queen Anne's lace, green poms and crocosmia greens.

Hydrangeas, Roses & Holly: Altar Flowers for Christmas

                      Unfortunately, this is the best picture I could get of the arrangements for the Latin Mass on Christmas Day.   However, it may serve as inspiration for what can be done in the most unlikely of spaces.   The architecture of the church is typical postmodern, with no vestiges of the past.  The crucifix was added and the tabernacle put in its rightful place only within the last d ecade.  Who would have thought that the Latin Mass would be making its debut here in our isolated, rural community when there are a handful of beautiful, century-old churches perfectly designed for the purpose not far away! The proliferation of fake poinsettias already present in the church set me in motion to find other examples of possibilities for the traditional altar.  My search led me to the liturgy guy's post Does this 1944 Christmas Eve Mass Look Anything Like Yours?   I was inspired by the Solemn High Mass featured in the movie Christmas Holiday and later horrified a

First Solemn Mass Reception Flowers

The entry table arrangement. Read the first of this series of posts  Extra-ordinary Day . The arrangments near the prie dieu used for the first blessings by the priest. Next read the  Epilogue to an Extra-ordinary Day Photos courtesy of Elizabeth Borges Photography