Samantha Musch
Owner and Toy Maker
My name is Samantha and along with my mum Christene, we proudly design and make all of our products. My mum handed down her passion for creative arts to me. Working together we both help each other with the challenge of coming up with new ideas and patterns. I am a wife and mother of two girls so when I am not sewing, I am enjoying time with my family. People have always told me how creative I am, so through Petunia Blossom I am able to share this with others.
About Petunia Blossom
Petunia Blossom emerged quietly and shyly out of the earth in 2009. In reality Petunia Blossom had germinated as a small seed in the mind of a young girl called Samantha a long time ago in a place called Whyalla in the 1970s. Sam as she was known, was the only child of a purple haired mother who ran a fairy shop. Her life was filled with imaginary friends, silk and gossamer wings, home-made play objects, crochet and whimsy.
Persistent Passion
Samantha was always going to take an extraordinary path in life. Hers often led into a forest of goblins, rabbits, pixies, ponies and red and white button mushrooms. While Sam’s teenage friends were out partying til 3am she could often be found in the back shed with her mother sewing up tissue boxes and stuffing cat door stops til dawn.
Creativity inspired by life
Sam’s creativity is limitless, varied and often inspired by nature, friends, her fashionista husband and her madly clever children. Petunia Blossom has rapidly overtaken Sam’s spare room to a more suitable and larger play room on-line. This has enabled Petunia Blossom to bloom wonderfully into the online arena for her seriously playful range of hand-crafted toys and lovingly designed gifts for all ages.
Petunia Blossom’s creativity is as unique as she is, her range is constantly changing as her ideas flit, flirt and evolve into new patterns, designs and shapes. Her children and her purple haired mother are often called in as assistant sewing elves when the orders run high, when the weather is warming up and spring-time brings newborns to the forest.

