Sept. 23, 2025

Dahlia Season - Handtied Bouquet Workshop

Wolterton

Welcome in Autumn with a relaxed floral workshop at Wolterton Hall where you will create your own hand-tied bouquet brimming with beautiful dahlias and other seasonal blooms. After a step-by-step demonstration, you will be able to make your own bouquet developing your own unique style.

There will lots of advice from Harriet on how to choose your flowers, spiral your stems, and care for your creation. The workshop uses sustainable floristry methods and locally sourced blooms wherever possible including some from the gardens at Wolterton Hall. If the weather is kind the workshop will include a stroll through the magnificent walled gardens at Wolterton. 

The workshop runs from 10am to 1pm and will be held in the Marble Hall. You will receive tea, coffee and refreshments on arrival and then be shown the famous Walled Garden (the largest in East Anglia) where preparations are starting for a major renovation. You will get to take home your creations plus a gift from Wolterton. If there is time we will also include a tour of the Hall’s State Rooms.

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  • Ticketed event FROM £80.00
  • Ticketed event FROM £80.00
  • Dahlia Season - Handtied Bouquet Workshop

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    Wolterton

    WOLTERTON

    One of the celebrated 'Power Houses' of North Norfolk, and today, with fresh energy brought by the Ellis family, Wolterton remains both deeply historic and entirely alive.

    Wolterton

    Tucked away in the tranquil countryside of North Norfolk, Wolterton Hall is a rare example of Palladian refinement balanced with personal, lived-in charm. Commissioned in 1722 by Horatio Walpole, younger brother to Sir Robert Walpole, Britain’s first Prime Minister, the house is steeped in political history.

    After the original manor was destroyed by fire, Horatio enlisted architect Thomas Ripley to realise his vision: a home of classical elegance and diplomatic discretion. A gifted ambassador and statesman, Horatio built Wolterton not only as a residence, but as a stage for diplomacy - its famously thick interlocking doors, said to have been a gift from Queen Caroline, were designed to muffle sensitive conversation. In return for brokering peace with France, Cardinal Fleury presented Horatio with a series of exquisite tapestries, still on display in the Saloon today — their elaborate needlework offering both artistry and quiet mischief to the trained eye.

    Wolterton is one of the four great Whig ‘Power Houses’ of North Norfolk, alongside Houghton, Holkham, and Raynham, and its story continued to evolve through the centuries. The 19th century brought architectural updates from George Repton, son of famed landscape designer Humphry Repton, while the 20th century was defined by family life, vividly documented in the diaries of Lady Nancy Walpole, who described both the charm and rhythm of estate living.

    Wolterton also has a history of royal visits — most memorably Queen Mary in 1951, followed by Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother in 1952, shortly after a second fire tested the Hall’s resilience. True to form, the family continued hosting in the Servants’ Quarters while repairs took place above.

    In recent years, Wolterton has undergone an award-winning restoration under the stewardship of Peter Sheppard and Keith Day, and now enters an exciting new chapter with the arrival of the Ellis family, whose Norfolk roots date back over 300 years. With their deep appreciation for craft, legacy, and landscape, the Ellises are preserving Wolterton not as a relic of the past, but as a living, breathing home — open to new stories and generations to come.

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