Since 2014, a small family studio in Hall Bazaar has been sending flowers across Amritsar the way we'd want our mothers to receive them — fresh, local, hand-tied. One city. No shortcuts.
Our founder Raghav Agrawal was 28 and back in Amritsar after ten years in Dubai. His grandmother had just passed; the flowers at her antim-samskaar came from a warehouse in Delhi three days old, sprayed with something to look green. "Bas," he told his wife Meera. "We'll do this ourselves."
They leased a 600-square-foot space in Hall Bazaar, a three-wheeler, and a WhatsApp number. Meera, who'd apprenticed under a temple florist at Mankameshwar, became the first hand. Raghav drove. The first month brought 42 orders. The second, 118. By year three we had florists in three studios across Hall Bazaar, Ranjit Avenue, and Amritsar Cantt.
We're still a family studio. Our cakes come from twelve small bakeries we've known for years. Our flowers come from farms we've driven to — Kathunangal, Tarn Taran, Achnera. Every bouquet is wrapped in a hand-stitched phulkari from a women's co-operative in Tarn Taran. Everything we send, we can vouch for.
We won't ship beyond the region. It means we can actually deliver on every promise we make.
Flowers arrive at the studio every morning and leave the same day. We'd rather sell out than hold old stock.
Zero third-party courier. Our two-wheelers and the humans on them are on our payroll.
We send you a photo of your exact arrangement before it leaves. No surprises on either end.