The contrast couldn’t have been starker. In the middle of several steel structures, transmission towers and smoke billowing out of factories in Thoothukudi’s (formerly Tuticorin) SIPCOT industrial area, walking into the grey and blue headquarters of Ramesh Flowers is like entering a garden in full bloom. Heady scents of lavender, vanilla, roses and cinnamon awaken your senses. It is like someone held out a heavenly bouquet of flowers to you amidst the heat, dust and grime. The visual is even more stunning when you walk into their showroom, where you can find colourful floral bouquets and arrangements, wreaths, potpourri bags in bright and exotic hues of orange, red, blues, green, burgundy, fuchsia, shimmering gold and silver, and ornamental sea shells across the entire room. It is hard to imagine that such a transformation is possible from something as nondescript as dried flowers and leaves, things we consider waste. But 61-year-old Mahendra Raj Singhwi of Ramesh Flowers was not only able to envision the transformation but also put in place a business that has built a name for itself in the international markets.