Flower Market Carrier

Early mornings at Melbourne Flower Merchant are a kind of theatre in themselves.

The trams roll past. The streets begin their daily choreography. Deliveries arrive at neighbouring buildings, café doors swing open, and the scent of fresh pastries and Axel Coffee drifts through the air. Inside, customers move slowly between buckets, selecting stems before work, finding something unexpected for home, or simply stopping for a moment in the middle of the city.

There’s always been something beautiful about carrying flowers through Melbourne.

The Flower Market Carrier was designed for exactly that moment.

Inspired by the old-world flower merchants of years gone by, this timeless waxed canvas tote brings a touch of yesteryear to a modern floral ritual. Built to hold cut flower bunches securely while allowing their beauty to remain on display, it transforms carrying flowers into something considered—part practicality, part style statement.

We imagined it becoming part of the everyday uniform of city life. Draped over your shoulder on the tram. Resting beside your chair at lunch. Sitting in the passenger seat on the drive home. Flowers peeking out the top like they’ve always belonged there.

Designed to last and made to be used again and again, the Flower Market Carrier reflects the way we think about floristry at Melbourne Flower Merchant—beautiful things should work hard, age well, and become better with use.

More than a tote and more than packaging, it’s an extension of the experience.

A small nod to tradition.
A little piece of Melbourne.
A carrier for the classics.

Flower Carrier

 

Fur You Mum

Mother’s Day looked a little different at Melbourne Flower Merchant this year.

There were flowers, of course.

But there were also paws weaving between flower buckets, leads looped around wrists and dogs arriving with the confidence of regular customers.

We invited our community to bring their dogs into the store and celebrate Mother’s Day with us.

We created a floral installation amongst the flowers and opened the doors.

Throughout the weekend people arrived with their dogs in tow. Some dressed for the occasion. Some curious. Some clearly excited to finally have a reason to bring their dogs into one of their favourite places.

Each fur mum left with a bouquet and a blooming tea pack—a small gesture to celebrate the people who know every walking route, carry treats in every bag and somehow have entire camera rolls dedicated to their dogs.

But the flowers weren’t really the story.

What happened around them was.

Dogs settled comfortably into the space. Customers stopped to talk. Photos became conversations. People introduced themselves through their dogs.

There was something really lovely about watching the store soften.

Nobody seemed in a hurry.

Outside, Bourke Street carried on as usual. Trams rolled past the windows. Coffee orders were called out nearby. The city kept moving.

Inside, people stayed longer than they meant to.

Customers sat with their bouquets. Dogs found sunny spots by the glass. Conversations stretched.

For a few hours, the store became less about shopping and more about community.

That’s always been something we love at Melbourne Flower Merchant.

Flowers create reasons for people to gather.

This time, they just happened to arrive on four legs.

And honestly, we think that might become one of our favourite Mother’s Day traditions yet.

     

 

 

Autumn – Cascading Beauty

This year, Melbourne Flower Merchant was proud to participate in the Melbourne International Flower & Garden Show, presenting our installation Autumn-Cascading Beauty as part of the Hanging Installation Competition – where we were thrilled to place third.

Our concept was inspired by the quiet drama of seasonal change, focusing on the natural transition from summer into autumn. The installation begins with a burst of golden Billy Buttons, a nod to the lingering warmth and brightness of summer sun. From there, it gently shifts into a the richer tones of autumn – burnt oranges, rusts and reds – layered with the textures of rose hips and dried foliage.

As you follow the flow of the installation, the leaves appear to fall away, revealing bare branches kissed with white, a subtle suggestion of the first frost. The colour palette deppens, capturing the moody muted tones of late autumn as the landscape prepares for winter.

The piece was designed to feel like a natural gradient – colour the way nature intended. A celebration of movement, change, and the quiet beauty found in the letting go.

Autumn is a tribute to transition. A reminder that there is beauty in the shift – in the falling, in the fading, and the spaces in between.