REVIEW · HO CHI MINH CITY
Ho Chi Minh City: Dried Flower Art Workshop in Saigon
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by VIVA VIETNAM · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Paper flowers, but not fake.
This 1-hour Ho Chi Minh City workshop turns real dried flowers into something you can use or hang, guided in English in a calmer corner away from the street noise. You’ll pick a project, build your layout with color and texture, and finish with a result you can actually keep.
I especially like the creative, no-pressure pace. The workshop is beginner-friendly because the key materials are ready for you, so you’re not spending your hour hunting for tools or guessing what to do next. I also like the choice between a practical floral coaster and a more decorative art frame, so you can match the craft to your style.
One thing to consider: some people expected heavier resin or extra decorative elements based on photos, but they found a more straightforward dried-flower placement on a base instead. If you’re picky about the exact look, ask what your finished coaster or frame will include before you book.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- A Quiet Craft Break in Busy Saigon Streets
- Two Projects: Floral Coaster vs Dried Flower Art Frame
- Inside the 60 Minutes: What You’ll Do Step by Step
- Materials and Resin Expectations: Know What You’re Really Buying
- The Beginner-Friendliness That Actually Matters
- Value for $20: When a Craft Becomes a Keepsake
- Transportation and Timing: Simple but Important Reality Check
- Who Should Book This Dried Flower Workshop (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book This Dried Flower Workshop in Saigon?
- FAQ
- What is included in the dried flower workshop?
- How long does the workshop last?
- Is the workshop beginner-friendly?
- What projects can I choose between?
- What language is the instruction in?
- Do I need to arrange transportation?
- Can I get a refund if my plans change?
Key points to know before you go
- Choose your craft: floral coaster for everyday use or an art frame for display and gifting
- Real dried flowers, guided layout: you learn how to combine colors and textures into a balanced design
- Small-group feel: less waiting, more hands-on help from an English-speaking instructor
- One-hour turnaround: enough time to finish your piece without turning it into a half-day project
- Take-home keepsake: you leave with one finished product, plus complimentary tea or water
A Quiet Craft Break in Busy Saigon Streets
Ho Chi Minh City moves fast. Horns, scooters, and errands can stack up before lunch. This workshop is built for the opposite mood: you sit down, slow your brain, and spend the hour making something with your hands.
The setting matters here. You’re not juggling transit times or standing in a long line. Instead, you’re in a calm creative space where the focus is on arranging dried flowers—so your attention stays on color, shape, and placement, not on the city’s pace. That makes it a smart add-on when you want a break that feels personal, not just another photo stop.
Also, the time window is ideal. At 1 hour, you can fit it into a busy itinerary without wrecking your day. You’re not committing to a long class that forces you to rearrange plans, and you still walk away with a tangible souvenir.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Ho Chi Minh City
Two Projects: Floral Coaster vs Dried Flower Art Frame
The workshop gives you a real choice: you either make a floral coaster or a dried flower art frame. That’s more than a menu option. It changes the way you’ll think about your design.
A coaster is practical. It’s meant for daily life—coffee, tea, desk time, that little homey detail that turns a souvenir into a habit. Because a coaster is round and meant to be viewed at a casual angle, you’ll typically focus on a centered composition and clean edges so it looks tidy when it sits out.
The art frame is more about display. You can treat it like wall art and aim for a composition that looks pleasing from farther away. If you like gifting, the frame option often feels easier to hand to someone because it reads like a finished piece, not a craft item.
Both options use the same core skills: choosing flowers by color, size, and texture, then arranging them into something balanced and visually satisfying. So if you’re unsure which to pick, choose based on where you want it to live—on your table or on your wall.
Inside the 60 Minutes: What You’ll Do Step by Step
This is the kind of activity where the structure helps you enjoy it. You don’t need prior art experience because the workshop is designed to guide you through the key steps.
Here’s how the session typically feels:
- You start by selecting dried flowers and related materials based on your chosen project.
- You arrange them to test color combinations and texture contrast before finalizing the layout.
- You get guidance on how to fix and finish your artwork so it lasts as a keepsake.
The big practical benefit is that you’re learning an approach, not just copying a sample. You’re taught to look at scale (small vs large elements), texture (thin petals vs chunkier pieces), and color harmony (light tones vs stronger accents). Those are the same basic ideas behind good floral design—just applied in a DIY format.
Another plus: materials are prepared in advance. That’s what keeps the workshop feeling relaxed. You’re not waiting while supplies are found or sorting through confusing packs of unknown items. It’s also why this is such a friendly option for beginners: your role is creativity and arrangement, not logistics.
One time-saving detail worth noting is the instructor’s role. You’re not left alone with a table and a vague instruction. The English-speaking guide helps you make decisions as you go, which reduces the usual stress of crafting for the first time.
Materials and Resin Expectations: Know What You’re Really Buying
The included materials list mentions items like resin, molds, tools, and frames. That means you should expect a finished piece, not just loose dried flowers sitting in a display.
That said, a couple of experiences flagged a mismatch between expectation and what was actually used. Some people reported that there wasn’t visible resin work and that the process felt more like arranging flowers onto a base (like a clear disc) and then taping or finishing it into place with simple decoration.
So what’s the takeaway for you? Don’t assume every piece will look exactly like the promotional photos. Ask your operator what the finishing process will be for your specific project—coaster or frame—so you’re not disappointed by differences in effect or sparkle level.
If you go in with the right attitude, this still makes sense. Even without dramatic resin layers, the core value remains: you’re building a design using real dried flowers, guided step by step, and you take home something you made yourself.
The Beginner-Friendliness That Actually Matters
Plenty of tours claim they’re easy. This one earns that reputation through how it’s set up.
First, it’s explicitly designed for beginners. You’re not expected to know composition rules or have steady craft skills. The instructor walks you through selection and arrangement, which is the heart of what people usually struggle with on DIY classes.
Second, it’s a small-group workshop, which is the difference between getting helpful nudges versus working in silence while others finish faster. In a small group, you’re more likely to get quick feedback if your colors feel off or if you need help balancing your design.
Third, you’ll get complimentary tea or water. That tiny detail supports the mood. Crafting is easier when you’re not rushing to find a cafe after the session starts. It also makes the hour feel like a small break, not a production.
If you’re traveling solo, this kind of guided crafting can be a relief. You get human interaction, but you’re still mainly focused on your own project. It’s a nice reset when you’ve spent days navigating on your own.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ho Chi Minh City
Value for $20: When a Craft Becomes a Keepsake
At $20 per person for about 1 hour, this is priced like a low-stress “do something nice” activity. And that’s how it should feel.
Your money isn’t mostly paying for a view or a timed entrance. It’s paying for:
- All the materials (dried flowers and finishing supplies)
- Instructor guidance in English
- A finished product you take home
- Complimentary tea or water
That’s the value equation. If you were to buy dried flowers, frames, resin, tools, and still pay for someone to teach you the arrangement, it would quickly cost more than $20. Here, you’re paying for convenience plus skill-building plus the final result.
Also, the time is efficient. You’re buying one hour of calm and creativity. If you’ve got a day packed with museums or markets, this is the kind of activity that keeps travel from becoming only logistics.
Still, keep the earlier resin expectation point in mind. If you’re paying for a specific visual finish, confirm what’s included for your exact coaster or frame. When you align your expectations, the value feels strong.
Transportation and Timing: Simple but Important Reality Check
Transportation isn’t included. That matters in Saigon, where moving across town can take time and energy. If you plan carefully, you’ll arrive relaxed. If you’re rushing, the start of your workshop might feel less calm than you expected.
Duration is 1 hour, and that’s both good and limiting. It’s great because it’s short. But it also means the craft won’t become an all-day art project. You’ll finish what you start, and you won’t have endless time for revisions.
Your best move: pick a time when you’re not immediately heading into something stressful. Think of it as a pause in your schedule. If you go after a long walk day, you’ll probably appreciate the slower pace more.
Who Should Book This Dried Flower Workshop (and Who Might Skip It)
I think this workshop is a great fit if you want a calm, creative break while staying in the city. You’ll likely enjoy it if you:
- Like DIY crafts that result in something you can use at home
- Want a beginner-friendly activity with guidance
- Prefer real, tactile souvenirs over mass-produced ones
- Need a quieter moment away from busy streets
It might be less ideal if you’re hard-set on a very specific finished look. If you want the exact effects you saw in photos—especially anything resin-heavy or flag-and-text style design elements—confirm those details before you book. Craft workshops can vary a bit by materials set and process, and you’ll be happier if you know what your version includes.
Should You Book This Dried Flower Workshop in Saigon?
Yes, book it if you want a short, guided, hands-on activity that gives you a take-home keepsake and a break from the city’s speed. The small-group format, English instruction, and beginner-friendly setup are real strengths, and the ability to choose between a coaster and an art frame lets you match the craft to your life back home.
Just do one smart thing: ask what your finished coaster or frame will include so you’re not expecting a resin look that doesn’t show up the same way for every group. If you get that clarified, this feels like an excellent $20 use of time in Saigon.
FAQ
What is included in the dried flower workshop?
You get all materials needed for your project (dried flowers, resin, molds, frames, and tools), guidance from a local craft instructor, a single finished product to take home (coaster or art frame), and complimentary tea or water.
How long does the workshop last?
The workshop lasts about 1 hour.
Is the workshop beginner-friendly?
Yes. It’s designed to be easy and fun for beginners, with materials prepared in advance and guidance from an instructor.
What projects can I choose between?
You can choose between decorating a floral coaster or making a dried flower art frame.
What language is the instruction in?
The instructor speaks English.
Do I need to arrange transportation?
Transportation is not included, so you’ll need to plan how you get to the workshop location.
Can I get a refund if my plans change?
Yes, you can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.































