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Amerifilm

40" x 100' Valentine Bouquet Cellophane Roll

40" x 100' Valentine Bouquet Cellophane Roll

The Amerifilm Valentine Bouquet Cellophane Roll is a 40" x 100' printed clear film built for floral bouque... Read more

The Amerifilm Valentine Bouquet Cellophane Roll is a 40" x 100' printed clear film built for floral bouquet wrap, Valentine's Day gift basket assembly, and seasonal retail packaging. The film carries a repeating Valentine bouquet pattern printed onto a clear base, so the design frames the product rather than hiding it. It is available in bulk and wholesale quantities for florists, gift basket assemblers, candy shops, party suppliers, and retail packaging teams.


A single roll delivers 100 running feet at a full 40" width. That is enough film to carry a florist or gift shop through a Valentine's production run without a mid-season reorder, which matters on a holiday where the entire selling window is compressed into roughly two weeks.


How the Film Handles

Printed cellophane behaves differently from clear film because ink sits on one face of the sheet. That printed face is stiffer than the unprinted side, which means the film wants to curl slightly toward the unprinted face when it comes off the roll. Working with the printed side facing out, which is how the product is meant to be presented anyway, puts that natural curl in your favor when you gather film around a bouquet or basket.


The ink layer also changes how the film fails. Clear cellophane tends to stretch before it tears. Printed film is more likely to split along a hard crease. In practice this means cutting with scissors rather than tearing across the roll, and pulling the sheet taut rather than folding it into position.


Working With the 40" Width

Width is what separates a basket-grade film from a treat-bag film. Narrower rolls, in the 20" to 30" range, are sized for single items and small arrangements. At 40", a single sheet reaches around a full bouquet or a large basket in one piece, with no seam running up the side.


That single-piece coverage is the difference between a wrap that reads as professional and one that reads as improvised. Seams catch light, collect creases, and pull apart when the package is handled. A bouquet wrapped in one continuous sheet holds its shape from the shop counter to the recipient.


Bouquet Wrapping Technique

Cut a sheet, lay it flat, and set the bouquet on the diagonal so one corner extends past the blooms. Bring the two side corners up and around the stems and gather at the stem line only. The film should form a cone with open volume at the top, where the flowers sit.


The most common mistake is tying at the bloom line rather than the stem line. The film is not what crushes flowers. Tension applied at the wrong height is. Gathering below the heads leaves the arrangement room to breathe and holds the presentation shape that the customer is paying for.


Print Selection and Product Pairing

A printed film is a design element competing with whatever it wraps. Over a single-variety bouquet, roses in particular, a bouquet print reads as a coordinated presentation. Over a mixed seasonal arrangement with its own color story, the print and the flowers give the eye two things to read at once and the arrangement loses.


The same logic applies to gift baskets. Printed film performs well over baskets built in neutral tones, where the pattern is the only visual event. Over a busy basket, clear film is the stronger choice and the printed roll is better held for the products it flatters.


Applications

  • Floral bouquet wrap
  • Single-variety rose bouquets
  • Valentine's Day gift baskets
  • Chocolate and confection gift baskets
  • Candy shop retail packaging
  • Wine and spirits gift baskets
  • Spa and self-care gift sets
  • Plush toy and novelty gift wrap
  • Retail Valentine's displays
  • Party favor wrapping
  • Anniversary and engagement gift packaging
  • Craft and hobby projects
  • Corporate client gift assembly
  • Event and catering presentation

Finishing Without Equipment

Cellophane basket and bouquet wrap requires no heat sealing equipment. The standard finish is a gather-and-tie: draw the film up at the stem or basket rim, secure with ribbon, twist tie, or a pull bow, and fan the excess film above the tie point.


Heat guns are sometimes used in higher-end retail work to shrink film taut against a rigid basket for a smoother surface. That is a finishing preference rather than a requirement, and it is not applicable to bouquet work, where the open cone above the tie is the point of the wrap.


Storage and Handling

Store rolls flat or hanging from a horizontal bar. A roll stood upright on one end for an extended period will deform under its own weight, and a compressed core puts a curl into the film that shows up in every sheet cut from it afterward.


Keep rolls out of direct sunlight and away from heat sources. Printed film held in a hot storage area over a summer will come out of the off-season more brittle than it went in, and brittleness on a printed film shows first as splitting along the folds.


Seasonal Buying Considerations

Seasonal print runs are produced on a calendar cycle and are not replenished mid-season the way clear film is. Valentine's compounds this, because the entire selling window is shorter than Christmas and the reorder cycle cannot keep pace with it.


Operations running a real Valentine's program place the order in late fall or early winter. A February reorder generally means taking whatever print remains in inventory rather than the one the program was built around.


Bulk and Wholesale Options

Sold as an individual roll. Available in bulk and wholesale quantities for florists, gift basket assemblers, and retail packaging operations running high seasonal volume. Quantity pricing available.


Sourcing and Production

Manufactured by Amerifilm.


Product Identifier

Item Number: D-9104V1


Key Takeaways

  • 40" x 100' printed cellophane roll, sold individually
  • Valentine bouquet print on a clear base, so wrapped product stays visible
  • 40" width wraps a full bouquet or large basket in one seamless piece
  • Printed film splits at hard creases, so cut with scissors and pull taut rather than folding
  • Store flat or hanging, never standing on end
  • Available in bulk and wholesale quantities
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The Amerifilm Valentine Bouquet Cellophane Roll is a 40" x 100' printed clear film built for floral bouquet wrap, Valentine's Day gift basket assembly, and seasonal retail packaging. The film carries a repeating Valentine bouquet pattern printed onto a clear base, so the design frames the product rather than hiding it. It is available in bulk and wholesale quantities for florists, gift basket assemblers, candy shops, party suppliers, and retail packaging teams.


A single roll delivers 100 running feet at a full 40" width. That is enough film to carry a florist or gift shop through a Valentine's production run without a mid-season reorder, which matters on a holiday where the entire selling window is compressed into roughly two weeks.


How the Film Handles

Printed cellophane behaves differently from clear film because ink sits on one face of the sheet. That printed face is stiffer than the unprinted side, which means the film wants to curl slightly toward the unprinted face when it comes off the roll. Working with the printed side facing out, which is how the product is meant to be presented anyway, puts that natural curl in your favor when you gather film around a bouquet or basket.


The ink layer also changes how the film fails. Clear cellophane tends to stretch before it tears. Printed film is more likely to split along a hard crease. In practice this means cutting with scissors rather than tearing across the roll, and pulling the sheet taut rather than folding it into position.


Working With the 40" Width

Width is what separates a basket-grade film from a treat-bag film. Narrower rolls, in the 20" to 30" range, are sized for single items and small arrangements. At 40", a single sheet reaches around a full bouquet or a large basket in one piece, with no seam running up the side.


That single-piece coverage is the difference between a wrap that reads as professional and one that reads as improvised. Seams catch light, collect creases, and pull apart when the package is handled. A bouquet wrapped in one continuous sheet holds its shape from the shop counter to the recipient.


Bouquet Wrapping Technique

Cut a sheet, lay it flat, and set the bouquet on the diagonal so one corner extends past the blooms. Bring the two side corners up and around the stems and gather at the stem line only. The film should form a cone with open volume at the top, where the flowers sit.


The most common mistake is tying at the bloom line rather than the stem line. The film is not what crushes flowers. Tension applied at the wrong height is. Gathering below the heads leaves the arrangement room to breathe and holds the presentation shape that the customer is paying for.


Print Selection and Product Pairing

A printed film is a design element competing with whatever it wraps. Over a single-variety bouquet, roses in particular, a bouquet print reads as a coordinated presentation. Over a mixed seasonal arrangement with its own color story, the print and the flowers give the eye two things to read at once and the arrangement loses.


The same logic applies to gift baskets. Printed film performs well over baskets built in neutral tones, where the pattern is the only visual event. Over a busy basket, clear film is the stronger choice and the printed roll is better held for the products it flatters.


Applications

  • Floral bouquet wrap
  • Single-variety rose bouquets
  • Valentine's Day gift baskets
  • Chocolate and confection gift baskets
  • Candy shop retail packaging
  • Wine and spirits gift baskets
  • Spa and self-care gift sets
  • Plush toy and novelty gift wrap
  • Retail Valentine's displays
  • Party favor wrapping
  • Anniversary and engagement gift packaging
  • Craft and hobby projects
  • Corporate client gift assembly
  • Event and catering presentation

Finishing Without Equipment

Cellophane basket and bouquet wrap requires no heat sealing equipment. The standard finish is a gather-and-tie: draw the film up at the stem or basket rim, secure with ribbon, twist tie, or a pull bow, and fan the excess film above the tie point.


Heat guns are sometimes used in higher-end retail work to shrink film taut against a rigid basket for a smoother surface. That is a finishing preference rather than a requirement, and it is not applicable to bouquet work, where the open cone above the tie is the point of the wrap.


Storage and Handling

Store rolls flat or hanging from a horizontal bar. A roll stood upright on one end for an extended period will deform under its own weight, and a compressed core puts a curl into the film that shows up in every sheet cut from it afterward.


Keep rolls out of direct sunlight and away from heat sources. Printed film held in a hot storage area over a summer will come out of the off-season more brittle than it went in, and brittleness on a printed film shows first as splitting along the folds.


Seasonal Buying Considerations

Seasonal print runs are produced on a calendar cycle and are not replenished mid-season the way clear film is. Valentine's compounds this, because the entire selling window is shorter than Christmas and the reorder cycle cannot keep pace with it.


Operations running a real Valentine's program place the order in late fall or early winter. A February reorder generally means taking whatever print remains in inventory rather than the one the program was built around.


Bulk and Wholesale Options

Sold as an individual roll. Available in bulk and wholesale quantities for florists, gift basket assemblers, and retail packaging operations running high seasonal volume. Quantity pricing available.


Sourcing and Production

Manufactured by Amerifilm.


Product Identifier

Item Number: D-9104V1


Key Takeaways

  • 40" x 100' printed cellophane roll, sold individually
  • Valentine bouquet print on a clear base, so wrapped product stays visible
  • 40" width wraps a full bouquet or large basket in one seamless piece
  • Printed film splits at hard creases, so cut with scissors and pull taut rather than folding
  • Store flat or hanging, never standing on end
  • Available in bulk and wholesale quantities

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between cellophane and polypropylene basket wrap?
True cellophane is a wood-pulp film and biodegrades. Most of what the gift and floral trade sells as "cellophane" is polypropylene, which is a plastic. On the roll they are nearly indistinguishable. The distinction only becomes load-bearing if you are making recyclability or compostability claims to customers, in which case confirm the material rather than going by the product name.
Why does printed cellophane sometimes look cloudy or hazy?
Two usual causes. Static picks up dust onto the film face, which reads as haze under retail lighting and wipes off with a dry cloth. The other is film that has been stored under compression, where the surface has taken a slight texture from the roll beneath it. That one does not wipe off, which is the argument for storing rolls flat rather than stacked under weight.
Can I run cellophane through a heat sealer or an impulse sealer?
Polypropylene film seals under heat. True cellophane does not reliably, and printed film introduces a further problem, because the ink layer interferes with the seal and can scorch. Bouquet and basket wrap is a gather-and-tie application, so the question rarely comes up, but if you are sealing rather than tying, test on scrap before committing a production run.
How many rolls should a florist stock for a Valentine's week?
It comes down to your unit count and your wrap size, and the honest answer is that you should size one wrap on your actual standard bouquet and divide the roll length by it rather than working from a rule of thumb. What is worth knowing is the asymmetry of the error: an extra roll carries to next year without spoiling, and a shortfall on February 12 cannot be fixed.
Does the print pattern have a direction I need to watch when cutting?
Repeating patterns on cellophane are generally printed to read from any orientation, which is why they survive the gather-and-twist of a basket wrap. Directional prints do exist in the category. If a pattern has a clear top and bottom, it will show at the gather point, where the film twists. Cut a test sheet and gather it before committing to a layout on a full production run.