Blooming Success: How to Create a Flower Preservation Business - Artisan Palace

Flower preservation has become one of the more compelling small business opportunities in the UK's creative economy. The combination of meaningful work, a growing market (particularly wedding and memorial preservation), genuine skill development, and a product that's difficult to commoditise makes it a more serious proposition than most craft businesses. This guide covers what's genuinely involved — the costs, the techniques, the pricing, where to sell, and what the realistic income picture looks like.

Professional flower preservation in resin — shadow box keepsake from a wedding bouquet
Wedding and memorial flower preservation is one of the most emotionally significant handcraft businesses you can run — and one of the more commercially viable.

Is There Enough Demand in the UK?

The UK market for flower preservation has grown substantially over the past decade, driven by two separate customer groups: brides who want to keep their wedding bouquets, and bereaved families who want to keep flowers from funerals. These are very different customers with different emotional states and different price sensitivities, but both represent genuine, recurring demand.

Wedding preservation is the larger market by volume — the UK has around 250,000 weddings per year, and while only a small percentage currently preserve flowers, awareness is growing rapidly through Instagram and wedding content. Memorial preservation is smaller in volume but often higher in average order value.

The competitive landscape in the UK is relatively undeveloped compared to the US, which means there's real opportunity for a studio that does quality work and builds a visible online presence.

Which Technique Should You Specialise In?

Resin preservation (recommended for most businesses)

The widest product range, the highest durability, and the best margins. Resin allows you to make everything from £10 hearts to £500 shadow boxes. The learning curve is significant but manageable. Startup costs are moderate. This is where the market is growing fastest.

Pressed flower art

Lower startup costs, no chemical handling, quicker to learn. But a smaller product range and more competitive market. Works well alongside resin rather than instead of it.

Freeze-drying (for established businesses only)

Equipment costs £5,000–£20,000. Only viable once you have proven order volume and the capital to invest. Not a starting point.

Equipment and Startup Costs

Item Approx. cost
UV-resistant epoxy resin (starter supply) £60–£120
Silicone moulds (assorted shapes) £50–£150
Silica gel (5–10kg, reusable) £30–£60
UV lamp (for curing, optional but helpful) £30–£80
Nitrile gloves, mixing cups, stir sticks (bulk) £20–£40
Craft torch (bubble removal) £15–£30
Sandpaper / polishing supplies £20–£40
Photography setup (lightbox, white background) £30–£80
Packaging (boxes, tissue, branded labels) £50–£100
Total startup range £305–£700

A realistic starting budget with some contingency is £800–£1,200.

Going further: make your own custom moulds

Off-the-shelf moulds limit you to the same shapes every other studio is using. Once you're established, making your own platinum silicone moulds gives you shapes nobody else can offer — a genuine competitive advantage that justifies higher prices and builds a distinctive product range.

Artisan Palace offers a £37 mould-making course covering the complete process: silicone selection, designing your own blank templates, vetted UK acrylic blank suppliers, DIY housings (no 3D printer required), and a full step-by-step walkthrough of your first finished mould.

See the mould-making course →

Pricing Your Work

Pricing is where most new preservation businesses undercharge, and it's the single most damaging mistake. Resin work is skilled, time-consuming, and produces an irreplaceable piece. Price accordingly.

A pricing framework that works for UK studios:

  • Materials cost — the resin, moulds, packaging, and postage for that specific piece
  • Time — at a professional rate. Don't pay yourself less than £15/hour to start; aim for £20–£25 as you build skill
  • Overhead allocation — a portion of equipment, subscriptions, and marketing costs per piece
  • Profit margin — typically 30–40% added on top

UK market price benchmarks for established studios: small resin pieces (hearts, keyrings) £15–£45; medium pieces (paperweights, frames, trinket dishes) £75–£200; large statement pieces (shadow boxes, large blocks) £250–£500.

"The people who value flower preservation enough to seek it out are not primarily price-shopping. They're buying something irreplaceable. Price for the skill and the irreplaceability, not for the materials."

Where to Sell in the UK

Resin robin keepsake — the type of product that sells through Instagram referrals
Products like the robin keepsake perform exceptionally well on Instagram and Pinterest where visual impact drives sharing.
Resin heart keepsake — entry-level product ideal for gift market
Small hearts and accessible keepsakes widen your customer base and make good bridesmaid gifts.

Shopify is the platform of choice for serious preservation studios — full control over pricing, customer experience, and data, with straightforward SEO integration. From £35/month.

Etsy is good for early discovery but brings platform dependence and fee erosion. A reasonable starting point while you build your own site, but long-term you want customers coming directly to you.

Instagram and Pinterest are the primary organic discovery channels for visual craft businesses. Consistent posting of high-quality photographs — particularly before/after content and in-progress shots — drives substantial organic reach in the wedding and bereavement niches.

Wedding directories — Hitched, Rock My Wedding, and Wedding Dates — are worth a listing once established. They drive referral traffic from actively planning brides.

Google search is the channel that drives the most committed buyers. Someone who searches "funeral flower preservation UK" is a buyer, not a browser. Building SEO-optimised content (guides, comparisons, FAQs) alongside your product pages is the highest-return marketing investment for a preservation studio.

Working With Florists and Wedding Planners

This is an underused channel. Florists have the direct relationship with the customer at the moment flowers are purchased — often before the wedding or funeral. A referral arrangement where the florist mentions your preservation service (in exchange for a 10–15% commission on referred orders) puts you in front of buyers at exactly the right moment.

Funeral directors are a similar opportunity for memorial preservation. Families are often thinking about the flowers in the days after the service, and a funeral director who mentions preservation creates warm, highly motivated leads.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Underpricing: The most common and damaging mistake. It attracts price-sensitive customers, makes the business unsustainable, and anchors your market perception at the wrong level.
  • Overpromising turnaround times: Resin curing genuinely takes time. A reputation for meeting realistic timelines is far more valuable than promising fast delivery and disappointing during what is often a highly emotional experience.
  • Poor photography: The product is visual. Bad photographs are the single biggest reason customers don't buy. Invest in lighting and styling before spending money on advertising.
  • Insufficient practice before taking orders: Every failed cast with a customer's irreplaceable flowers is a reputational and emotional disaster. Practice until your process is consistent.
  • Ignoring SEO from day one: SEO takes months to build. Starting blog content on day one, not day 180, means you have organic traffic by the time you need it most.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need any qualifications to start a flower preservation business in the UK?

No formal qualifications are required. You'll need to register as self-employed or set up a limited company. Health and safety obligations around resin handling are worth understanding — epoxy resin requires good ventilation, nitrile gloves, and avoiding skin contact.

How long does it take to become proficient enough to take customer orders?

Most people need 2–4 months of regular practice before their resin work is consistent enough to sell. Start with lower-risk products (small hearts, keyrings) before attempting complex shadow boxes.

What's a realistic income for a UK flower preservation studio?

A part-time studio handling 3–5 orders per week might generate £25,000–£45,000 in revenue at good pricing, with margins of 40–55% after materials. Full-time studios with strong SEO and referral networks can exceed £80,000 in revenue. The ceiling is primarily limited by the time it takes to complete each piece.

Should I focus on wedding or memorial preservation?

Both. Wedding preservation is higher volume and customers plan ahead. Memorial preservation has smaller volume but highly motivated buyers and higher average order values. The skills, equipment, and marketing overlap significantly.

How do I handle flowers that arrive in poor condition?

Set clear expectations in your order terms about flower condition and timing. When flowers arrive worse than expected, communicate honestly before proceeding. Never attempt to preserve flowers that will produce a poor result without discussing it with the customer first.


Have Flowers You'd Like Professionally Preserved?

If you're here because you have wedding or funeral flowers you'd like kept rather than starting a business yourself, we offer a UK-wide preservation service by post. Every piece is handcrafted by our artisan Julie. From £85.

Memorial flowers →   Wedding flowers →