You’ve planned the beach trip, packed the sunscreen, and booked the days off — but finding something genuinely creative and memorable to do between beach sessions is harder than it looks. Most visitors default to the same handful of activities and leave wishing they’d discovered something a little different. 

According to Eventbrite’s 2024 Event Trends Report, hands-on craft experiences have seen a steady surge in popularity among travellers seeking meaningful, take-home memories from their trips. So if you’re spending time in Old Orchard Beach this June, here’s the question worth asking: what if your Sunday morning produced something you could bring home and display on your kitchen table?

What Is the Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet Workshop?

Event details for Maine chenille stem flower bouquet workshop with floral display.

Running from Sunday, June 7, 2026 at 10:00 PM through to Monday, June 8, 2026 at midnight, Coastal Craft Workshop at 126 Saco Ave, Unit 101, Old Orchard Beach, ME 04064 is hosting an engaging two-hour session centred on one of the most satisfying crafts you can try as a beginner: the Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet. 

The class runs from 4:00 AM to 6:00 AM and is open to anyone aged 10 and up. In those two hours, you’ll be guided step by step to create a delightful five-stem bouquet: three flower stems and two foliage stems. The flowers include a lavender, a rose, and a daisy, while the greenery consists of a spiral stem and eucalyptus. Participants work with a large assortment of coloured chenille stems to choose from, giving each finished bouquet a personal, handcrafted look. Glue guns are used during the process, so the instructor keeps the session structured and safe for all skill levels.

The cost is $40 USD per person, plus a reservation fee. This is the kind of flower bouquet workshop where no prior craft experience is needed; you’ll leave with a finished piece and a new skill. Guests staying at Seagrass Inn will find Coastal Craft Workshop just a short drive from the property at 50 West Grand Ave. After the session, you’re back at the inn in minutes, bouquet in hand and ready for a relaxing afternoon by the heated outdoor pool.

How to Make the Most of the Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet Workshop

Tips for enjoying a chenille stem flower bouquet workshop with floral display.

Showing up is half the job. These practical steps will help you get the full value out of this flower bouquet workshop:

  1. Register in advance. The session has a limited number of seats, and the $40 cost plus the reservation fee is payable at booking. Use the official registration link to secure your spot before it fills.
  2. Arrive a few minutes early. Workshop spaces often set out materials just before the start time. Arriving early lets you browse the chenille stem colour selection before the session begins, your bouquet inspo can start right there on the table.
  3. Wear something you’re comfortable working in. Glue guns are in use throughout the class. Comfortable, casual clothing is your best bet. Nothing needs to be ruined, just sensible.
  4. Bring a tote bag. Your finished five-stem bouquet will need something to travel home in safely. A reusable shopping bag works perfectly and protects the stems on the trip back to Seagrass Inn.
  5. Take photos of the colour options. Before you start assembling, snap a photo of the available chenille stem colours laid out. This is useful if you want to recreate the arrangement later, or if your bouquet inspo starts evolving mid-session.
  6. Go slowly through the foliage. First-timers often rush the greenery and spend extra time on the flowers. The eucalyptus and spiral stems are what give the bouquet its finished, professional look; treat them with the same care as the petals.
  7. Book a room at Seagrass Inn for the weekend. The workshop is on a Sunday morning, making a Saturday night arrival ideal. A Two Queen-Sized Bed room on the 2nd floor gives families or friends a comfortable space to settle in the night before and head out fresh in the morning.

Who Is This Flower Bouquet Workshop Right For?

The Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet session is a genuinely inclusive event — it works for a wide range of visitors. Here’s a quick look at who gets the most out of it:

  • Families with children aged 10 and up — The age guideline keeps the glue gun element safe while still including older kids who will enjoy the hands-on process.
  • Couples looking for something different — A craft workshop is a low-pressure, side-by-side activity that produces something tangible. It’s a change from the usual dinner-and-beach routine.
  • Solo travellers — Craft workshops are one of the best ways for solo visitors to connect with other attendees in a relaxed setting. The collaborative atmosphere makes the time pass easily.
  • Friends on a weekend trip — Matching bouquets, competing colour choices, and shared glue-gun moments make for a fun memory.
  • Anyone who loves flowers but can’t keep real ones alive — A chenille stem bouquet lasts indefinitely with no watering required.
Guest Type Why This Workshop Works Seagrass Inn Room to Consider
Families (ages 10+) Inclusive, guided, and age-appropriate King Suite, 1st Floor
Couples Creative shared experience One Queen-Sized Bed, Ocean View, 2nd Floor
Solo travellers Social, structured, easy to join One Queen-Sized Bed (Budget), 2nd Floor Rear
Friend groups Fun competition, group photos Two Queen-Sized Beds, 2nd Floor

How Do You Make a Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet Step by Step?

Making a chenille stem flower bouquet is more straightforward than it looks, and that is exactly what makes this workshop so satisfying for first-timers. Here’s how the process works from start to finish:

1. Choose your Colours

Before you bend a single stem, pick your palette. The workshop provides a wide assortment of coloured chenille stems to choose from. Decide on your three flower colours, one each for the lavender, rose, and daisy, plus your greens for the eucalyptus and spiral foliage.

2. Form the Petals

For each flower, take a chenille stem and bend it into petal shapes using your fingers. Roses use tightly wound spirals, daisies use elongated loops, and lavender uses small, clustered twists along a central stem. Each petal style requires a slightly different technique, which the instructor walks you through one flower at a time.

3. Build each Flower Head

Once your individual petals are shaped, twist them together at the base to form the flower head. Wrap a second chenille stem tightly around the base to hold everything in place. This is where the glue gun comes in. A small dot of hot glue at the centre secures the petals and prevents unravelling over time.

4. Attach the Stem

Take a full-length green (or your chosen colour) chenille stem and twist it firmly onto the base of the flower head. Wrap the top inch tightly for stability. This becomes the stem your bouquet will stand on.

5. Create the Foliage Stems 

The eucalyptus and spiral greenery follow a similar process. For the eucalyptus, small oval loops are twisted off a central spine at regular intervals. The spiral stem is created by wrapping a chenille stem around a pencil or finger, then gently stretching it to produce a natural coiling effect.

6. Assemble the Bouquet

Once all five stems are complete, three flowers and two foliage, hold them together and arrange until the layout feels balanced. Layer the foliage behind the flowers, adjust heights, and fan the stems slightly outward. When you are happy with the arrangement, twist the stems together at the base or use a strip of chenille stem to bind them.

7. Finish and Personalise

A final pass with the glue gun on any loose petals or joints keeps the bouquet tidy. Some participants wrap the bound base in a contrasting chenille stem colour to give it a finished, wrapped-stem look. It is a small detail that makes the piece feel genuinely complete.

Craft Something Worth Taking Home

If you’re spending time near the coast this June, adding a structured, creative session to your itinerary is one of the better decisions you can make. The Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet workshop at Coastal Craft Workshop gives you a finished product, a new skill, and a Sunday morning that stands out from the usual beach walk. Register early — the $ 40-per-person session has limited availability and fills up ahead of popular weekends.

Seagrass Inn at 50 West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach, is the natural base for this kind of weekend. With complimentary parking, a heated outdoor pool, and rooms ranging from the comfortable King Suite for families to the Ocean View Queen for couples, the inn puts you within easy reach of the craft workshop and steps away from the coastline. Whether you’re staying for one night or a full long weekend, the location works in your favour. June weekends fill up fast along the Maine coast. Reserve your room before the spots are gone.

Frequently Asked Questions on Chenille Stem Flower Bouquet

Can I customize my flower bouquet beyond the three flowers listed?

The workshop’s structured format guides you through a lavender, rose, and daisy, but the wide selection of chenille stem colors means your flower bouquet can still feel entirely your own. Color choices, petal tightness, and foliage arrangement all vary between participants, so no two finished bouquets ever look exactly alike.

Where can I find bouquet inspo before attending the workshop?

Pinterest and Instagram are great starting points for bouquet inspo — search “chenille stem flower bouquet” or “pipe cleaner bouquet” to explore color combinations and arrangements others have created. Saving a few reference images to your phone before the flower bouquet workshop lets you walk in with a clear vision and make faster color decisions once the materials are laid out.

How long does a finished chenille stem bouquet last?

Unlike a fresh-cut flower bouquet, a chenille stem bouquet won’t wilt, drop petals, or require water. With minimal handling and kept out of direct prolonged sunlight (which can fade the colors over time), your bouquet can realistically last for years as a decorative piece.

Is the flower bouquet workshop suitable for people with no artistic background?

Absolutely. The flower bouquet workshop is specifically designed for beginners — the techniques involved rely on repetitive hand movements like bending, twisting, and looping chenille-stem wires, rather than on any drawing or painting skills. If you can follow step-by-step instructions and work with your hands, you have everything you need to walk out with a finished bouquet.