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Mums The Word A Florist

Order flowers and gifts from Mums The Word A Florist located in Fullerton CA for a birthday, anniversary, graduation or a funeral service. The address of the flower shop is 1175 N Berkeley Ave, Fullerton California 92832 Zip. The phone number is (714) 525-0317. We are committed to offer the most accurate information about Mums The Word A Florist in Fullerton CA. Please contact us if this listing needs to be updated. Mums The Word A Florist delivers fresh flowers – order today.

Business name:
Mums The Word A Florist
Address:
1175 N Berkeley Ave
City:
Fullerton
State:
California
Zip Code:
92832
Phone number:
(714) 525-0317
if this is your business: ( update info) (delete this listing)
Express you love, friendship, thanks, support - or all of the above - with beautiful flowers & gifts!

Find Mums The Word A Florist directions to 1175 N Berkeley Ave in Fullerton, CA (Zip 92832) on the Map. It's latitude and longitude coordinates are 33.879059, -117.923431 respectively.

Florists in Fullerton CA and Nearby Cities

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701 W Lincoln Ave
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1052 North State College Boulevard
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2491 E Chapman Ave
Fullerton, CA 92831
(2.11 Miles from Mums The Word A Florist)

Flowers and Gifts News

Aug 3, 2020

Obituary: Ann Hope Crawley - Montclair Local

After she retired, Hope hosted bi-weekly book groups, participated in a Montclair meditation group, volunteered weekly at the Salvation Army on South Fullerton street, and attended daily mass at Immaculate Conception. She was a devoted member of the early-morning water classes at the Montclair YMCA, where she enjoyed a close community of Y enthusiasts.Hope was born in Morristown, N.J., and spent most of her childhood in Waterbury and Watertown, Conn. She attended Trinity Washington University (Class of 1954) in Washington, D.C., and was active in their alumni community.Hope Crawley was known for her generous hospitality — her dining room table was crowded at holidays — and her careful listening.Hope is survived by her eight children: Patricia D’Ambrosio and husband John of Andover, Mass.; Frank Crawley and wife Kries of Kessel-Lo, Belgium; Anne Mernin and husband Michael of Montclair; Michael Crawley and wife Agnes of South San Francisco, Calif.; Joseph Crawley of Montclair; Mary Lea Crawley and husband Rob Pratt of Madison, N.J.: Matthew Crawley of Charleston, S.C.; and Paul Crawley and wife Christine of Glen Rock, N.J. Hope leaves 15 grandchildren: John, Paul, Maria, Frankie, Liesbeth, Ryan, Emily, Nikki, Joseph, Kaitlyn, Henry, Hope Pratt, Alison, Taylor and Brandon and her great grandson Matthew. She is greatly missed by her dog, Ginger.Hope believed in the power of love and forgiveness. She felt blessed to live her adult life in Montclair and gratitude for the community at the Newman Center at Montclair State University, Immaculate Conception, the Montclair YMCA, the Salvation Army and St. John’s Episcopal church. She was deeply inspired by her friends on Montclair Avenue and the unending care and grace of that special neighborhood.Due to the unfortunate circumstances of COVID-19, a memorial will be planned at a future date. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Parkinson’s Foundation.

Feb 27, 2020

Obituary: Catherine "Kitty" Mulroe - Montclair Local

Home, 76 Park St., Montclair. A mass of Christian burial follows Monday, Feb. 17, 10:30 a.m., at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, 30 North Fullerton Ave., Montclair.In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers, PO Box 302, Maryknoll, NY, 10545. For directions and online condolences visit www.moriartyfh.com.#mc_embed_signup{background:#fff;clear:left;font:14px Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif;width:100%}...

Feb 1, 2020

Figures, Flowers And Fire - South Pasadena Review

I loved Toulouse-Lautrec, Egon Schiele, John Singer Sargent and Manet.” Sobieski presented her work to the Sarah Bane Gallery in Fullerton, quit her job and showed for the next 10 years at the gallery, where she sold more than 100 of her paintings. She remained there until 2009, then returned to school to earn an MFA in painting from Claremont Graduate University. “After that, my work shifted into being curated for group shows,” Sobieski said. “I worked with different curators and was in multiple shows, and that’s what I’ve been doing up to this point.” Sobieski’s paintings depict a variety of subject matter, ranging from figures and animals to elements of nature. Her work uses lush oils on linen canvas to explore the formal elements of painting, with sincere imagery that speaks to the notions of beauty, abundance and loss. “In 2005 I began a series of flower paintings to change up my practice,” Sobieski said. “Much of my concentration had been tied to trying to grasp the human physical form, and I wanted to freely explore more of the formal elements of paint. I played with composition, color and paint surface. I used flowers because they are a forgiving structure to render and are also loaded with content.” “Debutante,” oil on paper, 2003. Another subjects Sobieski enjoys portraying is fire, which has played a significant role in her life. When she was 17, her childhood home in Pasadena burned down due to an electrical blaze. Sobieski’s two sons, James, 22, and Ollie, 20, work as emergency medical technicians, and her latest project, commissioned by the L.A. County Department of Arts and Culture, involved designing windows for a new fire station in Santa Clarita. “It was very serendipitous when they approached me for the project, because I’d had some fire paintings in my MFA show for graduate school,” Sobieski said. “I really enjoyed doing the collaboration, and I felt like I had a lot of kinship with the project. The thing I loved about this project was the purpose and the positive impact it has on the community. I feel like the project picked me.” For the Santa Clarita fire-station project, Sobieski enlisted fellow ArtCenter graduate Tim Carey and Judson Studios in South Pasadena, who fabricated windows featuring Sobieski’s colorful images that capture the tradition and reflect the life of a firefighter. In the near future, there will be a dedication ceremony that honors the firefighters and unveils the windows to the community. Sobieski also is working on a related coloring book for kids that will be given out at the dedication. Her May 17 solo show at Plan:d Gallery in Frogtown will combine her two main bodies of work — figurative paintings and florals — with the possibility of some glasswork as well. “I like painting flowers because they’re so forgiving,” Sobieski pointed out. “It’s not like drawing people, where you can instantly tell if something is off. With petals, you can twist and manipulate the elements without it looking wrong. What’s more important is the vocabulary of the mark, the color and the distances between the objects — that’s what tells the story.” When she...

Oct 10, 2019

It's fall, which means it's prime plant sale time in Southern California - Los Angeles Times

Glenwood Drive in Riverside. CNPS members get a 10% discount. riverside-sanbernardino.cnps.orgNov. 2-3California Native Plant Sale at the Fullerton Arboretum offers more than 100 plant Mediterranean, drought-resistant plant varieties propagated by arboretum volunteers and staff. Free admission and parking, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., members get early admission at 9 a.m. fullertonarboretum.org Advertisement If you have a plant-related class, garden tour or other event you’d like us to mention, email jeanette.marantos@latimes.com — at least three weeks in advance — and we may include it. Send a high-resolution horizontal photo, if possible, and tell us what we’re seeing and whom to credit.

May 31, 2019

Jacaranda trees: Invasion of the purple flowers bring peace, beauty (and some mess) to SoCal - The Pasadena Star-News

Thursday, May 30, 2019. (Photo by Terry Pierson, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG) A woman pushes a child near a Jacaranda tree on W. Wilshire Ave. in Fullerton, CA on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG) SoundThe gallery will resume insecondsRiverside resident Dick Miller planes flowers in his front yard as a jacaranda tree blooms in the background on Via Pintada in Riverside on Thursday, May 30, 2019. (Photo by Terry Pierson, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG) Miller said, ” They leave a mess and if they were on my property they would be gone,” he said when asked about the Jacaranda trees while gardening in his front yard. A man walks under the blooming jacaranda trees along Del Mar Boulevard in Pasadena on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Some say the jacarandas are the West Coast’s version of the cherry blossom. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG) Walnut High students roam Cal Poly Pomona, Calif. before graduating. The campus is dotted with jacaranda trees Monday, May 28, 2019. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG) Walnut High students get picture ready under a towering jacaranda tree at Cal Poly Pomona, Calif. before graduation Monday, May 28, 2019. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG) Jacaranda trees bloom along Del Mar Boulevard as pedestrians and vehicles cross the Pasadena street on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Some say the jacarandas are the West Coast’s version of the cherry blossom. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasad...

Mar 29, 2019

'You come for the flowers': Long lines don't deter visitors from seeing Lake Elsinore poppies - The Desert Sun

You come for the flowers. You want to be immersed in it," said Joseph Wallack, 23, of Fullerton. For an umpteenth weekend, throngs of visitors from across Southern California converged on Lake Arrowhead's Walker Canyon, where trillions of poppies burst onto the scene following recent rainstorms. It was the first weekend, though, that visitors could only get to Walker Canyon by way of shuttles called in by the city, and "so far, everything has gone fairly smoothly," said Shane Reichardt, senior public information specialist with Riverside County Emergency Management Department. MORE: Here are other California spots where you can find poppies Shuttles are being used to reduce congestion and maintain order in the area, where thousands have descended in recent weeks. The effort was part of a running theme that presented itself Sunday: Enjoy the flowers, but respect them. For the most part, it appeared the majority of visitors stuck to the main trail through Walker Canyon. Others strayed from the trail, but it at least appeared they stuck to smaller dirt paths or walked on grassy areas void of poppies. Not everyone seemed to be getting the message, as some people walked around with picked poppies in their hands while others lay down in the flowers and spread out while friends took their photos.

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