Below is the floral description that will be printed on this product card booklet.
Maple Leaf — "Let It Go — What’s Meant for You Knows How to Find You"
(Balance · Remembrance · Transformation)
To hold a maple leaf is to hold a quiet moment between seasons, where warmth meets wind and memory meets release. It is a symbol of grace in the art of letting go.
In the language of flowers and trees, the maple speaks of balance and transition — a gentle reminder that change need not be feared, only understood. In Victorian floriography, it stood for strength softened by tenderness, and love that endures through cycles of change — ripening, waiting, returning.
To the Celts, the maple was sacred — a bridge between light and shadow, earth and spirit. Its five-lobed leaves mirrored the human hand, reaching outward to guide the lost and weary. It was believed to show the way home, not by force, but by stillness.
In Japanese tradition, the momiji — the autumn maple — honors impermanence. Each crimson and amber leaf is a whispered farewell, a tribute to fleeting beauty, and a reminder that even endings can be tender. To carry one in autumn is to remember: everything returns, but never quite the same — and that is its grace.
The maple does not resist the wind. It releases what it can no longer hold. Not in sorrow, but in faith — that what is meant to stay will find its way back, in its own time, in its own form.
For in every fall, there is flight.
In every fading, transformation.
And in every letting go — a quiet knowing:
nothing truly loved is ever lost.