{"title":"How to Press Flowers - 2 Methods for Roses and More","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/other-crafts/how-to-press-flowers","category":{"slug":"other-crafts","name":"Other Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Sunday Sunshine","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/@SundaySunshine","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFh87wCbuaY"},"tldr":"Press fresh flowers two ways: flat profile press and dimensional petal-by-petal. Works for roses, garden blooms, and wildflowers. Color holds for years.","totalDurationSeconds":444,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Flower press (DIY wood press OR a heavy hardcover book)","Sharp scissors or pruning shears","Liquid craft glue (Aleene's, Mod Podge, or any clear-drying craft glue)","Tweezers (optional, for arranging small petals)","Paper towels or coffee filters for blotter paper"],"materials":["Fresh roses (any variety - spray, garden, or wild)","Parchment paper or plain printer paper (4-6 sheets per rose)","Cardstock or thick paper for the reassembly base","Hardcover book (heavy and thick) if not using a wooden press"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Choose Fresh Roses and Understand the Two Methods","text":"Start with the freshest roses you can - cut them in the morning if they're from your garden, or pick them up the day you plan to press. Wilted or droopy roses can still be pressed but they won't have the same vibrant final color.The two methods you'll learn here are method 1 (profile press - lay the whole rose flat) and method 2 (petal-by-petal reassembly - take it apart, press each piece separately, then glue back together). The method you pick depends on the look you want and how much time you have."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Fluff the Rose and Remove the Center for Profile Pressing","text":"Method 1 prep: gently wiggle your fingers around the outermost rose petals and work your way toward the center, fluffing the petals open so they spread flat. Don't fluff the very innermost petals - those will be removed.Use your thumb and index finger to pinch out the innermost petals and the reproductive center (the pollen-bearing stamens and pistil). These parts are too thick to press cleanly and they'll create lumps and discoloration in the final piece. Only the outer ring of petals stays."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Press the Rose Flat in a Wood Press or Heavy Book","text":"Lay the fluffed rose flat on the bottom paper of your press, petals spread the way you want them to look once dry. Fold or cover with a second sheet of parchment paper. Close the press and tighten lightly - just enough pressure to hold the rose flat. Too much pressure on day one will split the petals.Tighten the press a quarter-turn each day for the first week so the petals stay flat as moisture leaves them. After 2-3 weeks of pressing, the rose will be paper-thin and ready to use."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Take the Rose Apart Petal by Petal (Method 2)","text":"Method 2 starts the same way as method 1 - fluff the outer petals to open them up. But this time leave the reproductive center intact because you'll press it too. Carefully pluck each petal off one at a time and lay each one flat on the press paper with space between them.The more petals you press, the more layered your reassembled rose will look. Press the sepals (the green leafy base of the rose) separately. Press the center stamens and pistil separately so you can reattach them as the focal point of the rebuilt rose."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Reassemble the Dried Petals with Liquid Glue","text":"After 2-4 weeks of pressing, take all your dried petals out of the press carefully - they're paper-thin and brittle. Lay them on a clean surface and pick out the order: largest petals on the bottom, working up to the smallest.Use a tiny dollop of liquid craft glue (less than a pin head) under each petal and press them onto a cardstock base in rose-shape layers. Glue the dried reproductive center on top last - that's your visual focal point. The finished reassembled rose has dimensional layers no single-press method can match."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Pick the Method that Suits Your Project","text":"Compare the two finished roses side by side to see which suits the project you have in mind. Method 1 (profile press) gives a single flat silhouette with the rose intact - the clean look for greeting cards, bookmarks, and resin jewelry where you want the whole rose visible at once.Method 2 (petal-by-petal reassembly) creates a dimensional flower with visible layered petals - the look you want for framed shadow-box art, dried-flower jewelry, and decor pieces where the depth and texture matter more than the silhouette."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T17:27:11.855Z","published":"2026-05-03T01:12:54.227Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}