Drying Flowers: Three Methods to Preserve Your Blooms

To create the most beautiful keepsake jewellery, we need your help. Here are three reliable methods for drying flowers before sending them to us, so that every petal reaches us in perfect condition.

Drying Flowers the Right Way

To create the most beautiful pieces for you, we need your help with one important step. When it comes to flowers, we kindly ask that you dry them before sending, or ship them in silica gel. With thicker flowers, such as sunflowers, we have found that moisture during transit can cause mould to develop, which limits how fully we can use the bloom in your piece.

Dried flowers preserved for memorial jewellery

Method One: Pressing in a Book

The most familiar method is also the simplest. Place the petals between sheets of paper and set them in the centre of a heavy book to press and dry slowly. The drawback is time: this method takes the longest of the three.

Flower petals pressed between paper pages

Method Two: The Oven

For a faster result, the oven works well, particularly for thin petals and delicate leaves. Line a baking tray with baking parchment, lay the plant material gently on it with space between each piece, then cover with a second sheet of parchment. Place an oven-safe dish on top to apply even pressure, just as with the pressing method. Set the oven to fan circulation at 50 to 60 degrees Celsius and be patient. After about an hour and a half, open the oven and carefully test the petals for moisture; they should be completely dry. Take care not to raise the temperature: it is better to wait a little longer and check periodically. For thicker flowers that take more time, you can place them carefully in a container of rice for a few days after the oven stage to draw out any remaining moisture. Be gentle so the petals do not crumble.

Flowers drying in the oven on baking parchment
Important: flowers dried by the pressing or oven methods will not retain their three-dimensional form. They will be flat.

Method Three: Silica Gel (the Best Method)

For the finest results, we recommend silica gel. You can find it at garden centres, florist suppliers, and online. Place your flowers in a container and cover them completely with the gel, making sure every part of the bloom is submerged. Leave the container in a dry, dark place for approximately seven days, checking that the gel has absorbed all the moisture from the flowers.

Flowers buried in silica gel crystals for drying

This method preserves the flower's three-dimensional shape, which is essential when the bloom is to be set into a keepsake stone or a similar three-dimensional piece.

Three-dimensional dried flower ready for jewellery setting

Shipping Tips

Once your flowers are dry, place them very carefully between two sheets of paper, taking care that they do not crumble. Sandwich these sheets between two thin pieces of card so the flowers are protected from both sides. For whole flower heads or larger elements that you wish to preserve in three dimensions, such as in a keepsake stone, choose a small box so that nothing is bent or crushed during transit. Address the parcel and send it to us, and we will turn it into something lasting.

Dried flowers carefully packaged for posting

Jewellery Examples with Dried Flowers

The pieces below show what becomes possible when flowers are prepared with care. Each one holds the colour, shape, and quiet presence of a bloom that matters.

Memorial jewellery with dried flower inclusions Keepsake pendant containing dried flower petals Handcrafted ring with preserved flower inclusion Bracelet bead with dried flower set inside Sterling silver piece with flower petal inclusion Keepsake jewellery featuring dried blooms Collection of memorial pieces with flower inclusions

For many more beautiful inspirations, we warmly invite you to browse our gallery.

Drying Flowers: Three Methods for Perfect Results | Keepmoments