I came to paper flowers unexpectedly – and changed my life to fit them in. I'd been running a stationery business for years when lockdown brought it to a sudden stop. I started walking - every day, with my twins - along the Wirral coast and through the hedgerows near home in Hoylake. And during those walks, I rediscovered something I'd had as a child but quietly lost: a genuine, slightly obsessive love of British wildflowers.
I started recreating them in paper. One flower led to another. I couldn't stop. What hooked me in was, quite simply, looking. I spent a lot of time that summer just looking. To make a convincing Corn Poppy or a wild Dog Rose in crepe paper, you have to study it properly - the way the petals sit, how the stamens emerge, the position of leaves along a stem. You have to see it, really see it, in a way we almost never do when we're just walking past. That, more than anything, is what I teach.
Why I love teaching
I'd been making on my own for a while before I started teaching, and – honestly – I think teaching made me better at it. There's something about having to explain exactly why you shape a petal a certain way, or how to get that particular curve in a stem, that forces you to understand your own craft more deeply. And I love teaching because of what I see happen in the room. People who've told me they're "not creative" (I hear this a lot!) - pick up a piece of crepe paper, and an hour later they're holding something beautiful that they made themselves. It never gets old.
I also find that making paper flowers together is genuinely connective. It’s absorbing, genuinely mindful, oddly relaxing – it seems to make people talk more honestly than they would in most social situations. I've had the loveliest conversations in my studio.
A bit of background
I was funded by Arts Council England to develop my work as a paper botanist, which still makes me smile a little every time I say it. I've created large-scale wildflower installations for National Museums Liverpool, been commissioned for photoshoot and TV props, and taken wildflower-making into over 29 schools and community groups across the Wirral, working with more than 600 children through projects including The Paper Meadow. I also contributed work to the Hillsborough Memorial Banner, which now lives in the FIFA Museum in Zurich.
My work has been featured in Country Living and Country Homes & Interiors, and I write a Substack called The Paper Wildflower - a long-form letter about nature, natural colour, and the particular magic of making things by hand.
I teach regular weekly evening classes at my Hoylake studio, day workshops including my new Signature Day - Form & Freedom - and occasional multi-day Paper Garden Masterclasses in Norfolk and Wales for those who want to go deeper.
All levels welcome. All you need is curiosity and a willingness to look at a flower for longer than usual.
Ling Warlow, Paper Botanist — Studio 3, 3 Wood Street, Hoylake, Wirral