ice carving secrets: ionic column vase design
ice carving secrets: ionic column vase design
Ice and flowers go very well together and so ice vases are very popular. Unfortunately, tall vases are often top-heavy and can be dangerous. If you look at the template of this vase, you’ll notice that there’s more mass in the top half of the sculpture. This means that the base is crucial. Vases must be very stable and I often add more ice to the base to make sure that there’s no possibility that the sculpture could come down. Incidentally, my caution is well-founded. Many years ago (more than ten,) I did have a vase come down once AFTER the event was over. I was taking down another sculpture and I heard a big crash. I lucked out: no one was around it and it didn’t damage anything except itself.

Another important part of dealing with ice vases is the ice-floral juncture. Instead of cutting a hole in the sculpture, I make every vase with a very flat top. The florist has been advised of this in advance and knows that the arrangement must be in a container with a flat plastic bottom that’s not too large for the sculpture. For this vase, I usually suggest a flat 10” plate. You could also get away with a 12” plate. I also suggest to the florist that it would look better if the arrangement had parts that hang down a little bit below the plate, so that the plate and napkin are hidden from view.
Going with a flat top makes it easier on you and on the florist. If you cut a hole, then you or the florist almost always has to make some sort of adjustment. In addition, you both have to be there. This way, the florist can drop off the arrangement in advance and it’s really no problem. Also, I’ve NEVER had anyone comment that the vase isn’t hollow and that it looks weird because of that. For some reason, nobody seems to notice or care.
Before the arrangement is placed on top of the vase, I make sure top is level and I put a folded cloth dinner napkin on top of it to keep the arrangement from moving. After it’s in place, I make sure that everything, including the arrangement, is stable and that nothing looks dangerous. If it’s dangerous, then I make changes until it’s not.

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The following comment was on the original blog entry. After some technical difficulties, the blog had to be reconstructed, and this was the only way to keep the original comments.
I've had good luck using an inexpensive white washcloth--wet, then folded flat, as the interface between the ice and the floral arrangements. The "nap" of the washcloth does a good job of grabbing the ice and the floral arrangement.
Monday, June 30, 2008 - 03:28 PM
ionic column vase design
4/20/07
An ionic column vase with a VERY large floral arrangement on top (by the Plant Gallery, New Orleans)