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A heart-warming Birthday surprise for someone you truly care about!

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Funeral Service Flowers for a well-lived life is the most cherished. Be that open heart for that special someone in grief.

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Nix Florist

Order flowers and gifts from Nix Florist located in Hampton SC for a birthday, anniversary, graduation or a funeral service. The address of the flower shop is 104 Elm Street West, Hampton South Carolina 29924 Zip. The phone number is (803) 943-3371. We are committed to offer the most accurate information about Nix Florist in Hampton SC. Please contact us if this listing needs to be updated. Nix Florist delivers fresh flowers – order today.

Business name:
Nix Florist
Address:
104 Elm Street West
City:
Hampton
State:
South Carolina
Zip Code:
29924
Phone number:
(803) 943-3371
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 Nix Florist directions to 104 Elm Street West in Hampton, SC (Zip 29924 ) on the Map. It's latitude and longitude coordinates are 32.86739, -81.10984 respectively.

Florists in Hampton SC and Nearby Cities

6895 Yemassee Hwy
Yemassee, SC 29944
(8.23 Miles from Nix Florist)
558 Wagner St
Allendale, SC 29810
(15.17 Miles from Nix Florist)
1346 Barnwell Hwy
Allendale, SC 29810
(16.46 Miles from Nix Florist)
10675 Bells Hwy
Ruffin, SC 29475
(17.55 Miles from Nix Florist)

Flowers and Gifts News

Jul 6, 2021

The irresistible rise of the rose - Financial Times

Jenny Barnes, head gardener at Cottesbrooke Hall in Northamptonshire, has become known for her magnificent, sculptural trained roses that spiral across mellow old walls or are woven into latticed domes that will be smothered in flowers by summer. Later this year she will be teaching courses in her pruning methods.Nick Knight, meanwhile, has been fascinated by roses for decades – his only tattoo from “a misspent youth” depicts a single rose. He first began photographing them for the Natural History Museum’s Plant Power installation in 1993. “I thought there was a real beauty – and a changing beauty – even in a single bloom of this flower,” he says. Almost a decade ago the photographer started taking pictures of roses cut from his garden that were simply arranged using only daylight at his...

Oct 15, 2020

Entrepreneur finds formula to grow Detroit Flower Company - Fairfield Citizen

Detroit Flower’s Instagram followers — 6,460 people and growing — wait for the company’s founder, Ja’Nye Hampton, 21, to post images of flowers each day. If she misses a day, she says, she receives several messages from people asking why. “It’s overwhelming,” Hampton told the Detroit Free Pres s. “Detroit is literally amazing. They only want to see you win. So many people that I’ve never met in my entire life go so hard for me.I just can’t believe it.” Hampton, 21, started the business two years ago, but she originally had dreams of becoming a fitness trainer. Now, she knows that flowers have been her calling this whole time. Customers send messages to order colorful sunflowers and roses in various arrangements around the clock. But no flower arrangement is the same, Hampton said. “I just love waking up and doing flowers,” said Hampton. “I’ve worked jobs and I’ve managed jobs, but there’s nothing like having your own (company). I really put my all into it and I literally live to ...

Sep 7, 2020

Princess Diana’s Favorite Flowers Have a Deep and Surprising Royal Symbolism - Vanity Fair

Spencer line. A week after her death on August 31, 1997, Princess Diana was laid to rest at Althorp House, the Northamptonshire estate that has been in her family since the 16th century. This year he tweeted a photograph of his annual tradition on the anniversary of Diana’s death, lowering the family flag at Althorp to half-mast.The Spencer family held a small, private ceremony when they buried Diana, but declined to mark the site where she was interred until 2016. Instead a lake on the property—the Round Oval, a body of water where the family once ice skated in the winter—was dedicated to her memory, with a monument commissioned from the designer Edward Bulmer. A plaque on the monument shows her decorated with roses and forget-me-nots, and the garden is now planted with similar perennials as well. The rose is a common symbol for all of England, but the forget-me-nots seem to symbolize Earl Spencer’s specific bond with his sister.Diana and the Spencer family moved to Althorp House after her grandfather died when she was 13, but she was born at Park House, a mansion on the Sandringham estate that her family had rented from the queen for decades. According to Tina Brown’s The Diana Chronicles, she had a childhood that was “traditional” and “sheltered” but involved plenty of time outside. When their mother left in 1967, Charles and Diana were the only two children left in the house, as their older sisters were off at boarding school.Now Diana’s childhood home is a hotel, but the Sandringham gardens that surround it have changed little since the 1860s, when...

Jun 19, 2020

Uptown Flower Shop Sustained By Strong Saint John Roots - country94.ca

Dean. “Sometimes there’s someone on the Kingston Peninsula or Hampton that’ll bring in garden flowers that we can buy.” The business was founded by the late Guy G. Keirstead whose passion for flowers led him to first rent a stall at the City Market in 1925. Keirstead’s operated out of the market from 1925 to 1946, until he purchased property on the corner of Charlotte and Princess Street where the shop still operates to this day. A piece of family history (Image: Elizabeth MacLeod) The building survived the Great Saint John Fire of 1877 and used to be a hardware and butcher shop, which were later combined to make Keirstead’s. “You have some of the old coolers that we still have from back when they opened up this shop in the 40’s,” said Dean, showing where some of the flowers are stored now. The shop has been run by Guy’s great grandson, Brian Keirstead since 1999, who turned the building’s upper level into a museum and gift shop, selling works of local artists such as Fred Ross and Mary Galbraith until it closed a few years ago. From Mid-March to Easter Keirstead stayed open at reduced hours throughout the pandemic, then closed for a few weeks until they reopened before Mother’s Day on May 9. “It’s really difficult getting flowers right now. They’re just starting to come back, but it’s not where it used to be; it’s a little difficult and it’s a little pricier to get flowers right now too,” said Dean. “But other than that, as long as people give us a lot of notice for specialty items, we can get them in.” Working reduced hours and with a reduced stock of flowers during spring and prime flower-giving occasions, from Easter to Mother’s Day to Professional Secretary’s D...

Feb 27, 2020

Nothing Says ‘I Love You’ Like Secondhand Roses - The New York Times

So Ms. Lubell created a second company, Garbage Goddess, which provides eco-cleanup services for events in New York City, the Hamptons, the Hudson Valley and soon, Los Angeles. “We try to find alternative homes for everything,” she said. “We look at recycling as our last resort.” Her goal is to have less than two bags of garbage for each event.Often, Garbage Goddess will donate event flowers to textile designers like Cara Piazza, who uses the flowers to make natural dyes in her Brooklyn studio.“One bouquet from a wedding will get you a scarf and a kimono,” Ms. Piazza said. “I will get nine massive garbage bags full of flowers from events that will last me a month.”“Flower repurposing is one of the biggest things happening in the events industry right now,” said Nicki Fleischner, the founder of Plan with Purpose, a website that showcases ethically-minded event vendors. “There are more companies coming out of the woodwork all the time.”“Flower repurposing is one of the biggest things happening in the events industry right now.”Credit...Brittainy Newman/The New York TimesJennifer Grove, an event planner, started...

Dec 18, 2019

In bloom: New shop, Forest Flowers, opens on Market Street in Northampton - GazetteNET

In bloom: New shop, Forest Flowers, opens on Market Street in Northampton News > Business A small arrangement by Marisa Filippone, owner of Forest Flowers, a new florist shop on Market Street in Northampton. STAFF PHOTO/CAROL LOLLIS li class="slideimage" data-src="/getattachment/bd7a4d3f-db04-4f03-8523-885dcf1c28a8/BIZflorestflowers-hg...

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