Jocko Fajardo - FIRST FLOOR BALLROOM CHANDELIER, MADE IN SPAIN, CA. 1960s

Photographed by Rudney Novaes Photography

Florist’s inspiration: “I have sought thee, sung thee, dreamed thee, Dulcinea
Now I've found thee, and the world shall know thy glory”—Richard Kiley in Man of La Mancha Dulcinea is the name Don Quixote gives to a local farm girl that he fancies to be his lady and the object of his adulation in a chivalric romance. She repre- sents playful femininity; a beauty and character bold and inviting while beguilingly sweet. To this day, a reference to something "Dulcinea" in character implies a sense of devotional idealism and love that is both robust and bountiful.

Recipe: Burgundy cymbidium, “Golden Shower” or- chids, purple anemone, merlot rose, Purple Haze rose, Purple Moon rose, yellow kangaroo paw, yellow pincushion protea, deep blue Dutch hydrangea, blue purple clematis, grevellia, feather eucalyptus.

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