Wedding Floral Inspiration — 80 Palette Recipes
Browse real wedding floral recipes organized by color palette and arrangement type. Every entry includes exact stem counts, 2025 US wholesale pricing, and florist design tips you can use today.
$98–$145
Blush & Whimsical Bridal Bouquet
A blush whimsical bridal bouquet blends soft garden-party romance with intentional movement — loose sweet peas, unruly astilbe, and a slightly asymmetric silhouette that looks gathered rather than arranged. This recipe is built for spring and early-summer garden weddings.
Read guide →$68–$105
Blush & White Wedding Centerpiece
Blush and white is the most-requested wedding palette year after year. This centerpiece recipe combines soft focal roses with delicate filler to create reception tables that photograph beautifully from every angle.
Read guide →$95–$140
Blush Peony Bridal Bouquet
A peony-forward bridal bouquet is every florist's dream project — and every client's request in May and June. This recipe leans into peony abundance with supporting stems that let the peonies be the hero.
Read guide →$85–$135
Blush Garden Rose Bouquet
When peonies aren't in season, blush garden roses become the hero of the bouquet. This recipe uses David Austin varieties (Keira, Juliet) for maximum bloom size and layered depth — the peony alternative that works year-round.
Read guide →$62–$98
Blush & Dusty Rose Centerpiece
Dusty rose is the muted, slightly mauve version of blush — more sophisticated, more moody, perfect for late-fall and vintage-inspired weddings. This centerpiece recipe balances warm blush with cooler dusty tones for tonal depth.
Read guide →$85–$135
Blush Cascading Bouquet
A cascading bouquet trails 12+ inches below the main dome — dramatic, romantic, and a distinct visual moment. This blush cascading recipe uses trailing amaranth and jasmine vines for the signature drop-down effect.
Read guide →$25–$42
Blush Flower Crown
A blush flower crown is the romantic hair accessory for bohemian brides and flower girls alike. This recipe uses mini spray roses and waxflower for lightweight all-day wearability.
Read guide →$85–$135
White Classic Bridal Bouquet
The white classic bridal bouquet is the timeless wedding florist staple — a tight, symmetrical dome of all-white blooms that photographs beautifully in any era. This recipe balances traditional density with modern stem selection.
Read guide →$75–$125
All-White Wedding Centerpiece
The all-white centerpiece is the ultimate formal wedding table — hydrangeas and garden roses layered densely into a symmetrical dome. Perfect for ballrooms, black-tie weddings, and luxury receptions.
Read guide →$62–$95
White & Greenery Wedding Flowers
White and greenery is the modern minimalist's wedding palette — clean, fresh, and sophisticated. Heavy on lush greenery with strategic white focal flowers, this recipe creates a botanical garden feel without overwhelming color.
Read guide →$78–$125
Ivory & Cream Wedding Bouquet
Ivory and cream is the warmer alternative to pure white — softer, more forgiving in photos, and perfect for vintage-inspired weddings. This recipe leans into warm white tones with subtle champagne undertones.
Read guide →$95–$140
White Garden Rose Bouquet
A white garden rose bouquet highlights the cabbage-like open petals of premium garden rose varieties. This recipe features David Austin Patience and Purity for layered petal depth that photographs like a portrait.
Read guide →$58–$95
White Ranunculus Bridal Bouquet
A ranunculus-focal bouquet is the florist's secret for the peony-without-peony look — the tissue-paper layered petals create the same visual impact at a fraction of the cost, and ranunculus is available longer in the year.
Read guide →$120–$185
Pink Tropical Wedding Flowers
Pink tropical wedding florals bring Hawaiian and Caribbean drama into the reception — hot pink anthurium, bird of paradise, and vibrant orchids combined into sculptural arrangements. Perfect for destination weddings or bold statement aesthetics.
Read guide →$62–$98
Hot Pink Wedding Centerpiece
Hot pink is the bold, unapologetic wedding palette — pure celebration energy. This centerpiece recipe uses hot pink peonies and garden roses for maximum saturation.
Read guide →$75–$118
Soft Pink Whimsical Bouquet
Soft pink whimsical is the garden-gathered cousin of blush whimsical — slightly more saturated, with visible pink tones throughout. This bouquet leans into loose, asymmetric movement with multiple pink variety layers.
Read guide →$82–$128
Pink & Peach Bridal Bouquet
Pink and peach creates a soft 'sunset' palette that's perfect for summer weddings — warm, romantic, and slightly unexpected. This recipe blends peach garden roses with pink peonies for tonal harmony.
Read guide →$68–$110
Pink Garden Party Centerpiece
Pink garden party centerpieces evoke an English cottage garden — loose, overflowing with 10+ flower varieties, and heavy on pink tonal depth. Perfect for afternoon outdoor weddings and intimate estate receptions.
Read guide →$82–$128
Deep Pink Lush Bouquet
Deep pink is darker and more saturated than hot pink — raspberry, fuchsia, and rose tones combined for a rich, dramatic bouquet. This recipe creates maximum visual density for black-tie or evening weddings.
Read guide →$95–$145
Peach & Coral Wedding Flowers
Peach and coral is the warm-toned summer wedding palette — sophisticated, friendly, and photographs beautifully in natural light. This recipe combines coral peonies with peach garden roses for a layered warm palette.
Read guide →$72–$115
Peach Bridal Bouquet
Peach is the understated warm alternative to blush — slightly more orange, slightly more golden, and unique enough to stand out in a sea of blush weddings. This bouquet recipe uses Darcey as the peach hero.
Read guide →$78–$118
Blue, Pink & Peach Bridal Bouquet
Blue, pink, and peach is an unexpected tri-color palette that balances cool blue accents against warm peach and pink focal flowers. It's the 'something blue' palette for brides who want more than just a subtle touch.
Read guide →$82–$135
Coral Tropical Wedding Centerpiece
Coral tropical centerpieces bring sunset warmth into destination weddings. This recipe uses coral-toned tropical flowers like pincushion protea and anthurium for bold sculptural statements.
Read guide →$52–$85
Peach Garden Rose Centerpiece
A peach garden rose centerpiece lets Darcey (the signature peach rose) be the visual anchor. Supporting peach ranunculus and sweet peas create tonal harmony without competing for attention.
Read guide →$82–$135
Burgundy Wedding Bouquet
Burgundy is the definitive fall wedding color — deep, rich, and dramatic. This bouquet recipe uses burgundy garden roses as the backbone with dahlias and scabiosa for textural depth.
Read guide →$85–$135
Burgundy & Blush Wedding Flowers
Burgundy and blush is the most popular fall wedding palette — deep wine tones balanced by soft blush accents. This recipe creates the richness of burgundy without losing the softness that makes blush so appealing.
Read guide →$72–$115
Wine & Dusty Rose Centerpiece
Wine and dusty rose is the sophisticated moody cousin of burgundy and blush — slightly more muted, slightly more vintage. This recipe creates reception tables that feel rich without being overwhelming.
Read guide →$78–$120
Deep Red Romantic Bouquet
A deep red romantic bouquet channels classic Old-Hollywood glamour — rich red garden roses, velvet-like texture, and dramatic saturation. This is the bouquet for brides who want unapologetic romance.
Read guide →$75–$118
Burgundy Fall Centerpiece
A burgundy fall centerpiece leans fully into the season — burgundy dahlias, bronze chrysanthemum, and fall foliage for a rich, earth-toned reception table. Perfect for October through early November weddings.
Read guide →$72–$115
Blue & White Wedding Flowers
Blue and white is the coastal wedding classic — crisp, fresh, and timeless. This recipe uses blue delphinium as the vertical hero with white garden roses for classical balance.
Read guide →$68–$108
Dusty Blue Wedding Bouquet
Dusty blue is the muted, sophisticated cousin of true blue — softer, more romantic, and widely requested for modern weddings. This bouquet recipe balances dusty blue accents with cream focal flowers.
Read guide →$58–$95
Lavender & White Wedding Flowers
Lavender and white combines the signature Provence fragrance with classic white blooms. This recipe layers fresh lavender stems with white garden roses for an aromatic, Provence-inspired bouquet.
Read guide →$58–$92
Blue & Purple Whimsical Bouquet
Blue and purple whimsical bouquets lean into cool-tone cottage garden drama — delphinium, foxglove, lavender, and scabiosa combined into a loose, asymmetric bouquet with visible movement.
Read guide →$70–$110
Something Blue Bridal Bouquet
The 'something blue' tradition gets its floral interpretation — a primarily white bouquet with a few intentional blue accents hidden throughout. This recipe is elegant, subtle, and honors tradition without dominating the palette.
Read guide →$68–$108
Terracotta Wedding Flowers
Terracotta is the earthy, desert-inspired wedding palette — warm rust tones, dried accents, and muted orange-brown hues. Perfect for fall weddings or desert and ranch venues year-round.
Read guide →$72–$115
Burnt Orange Fall Wedding Bouquet
Burnt orange is the warmest, most autumn-specific wedding palette. This recipe uses rust-toned garden roses, burnt orange dahlias, and fall foliage for a bouquet that screams October.
Read guide →$55–$88
Rust & Cream Centerpiece
Rust and cream creates a muted, vintage-earthy centerpiece — rust-toned focal flowers balanced with cream accents. The palette is softer than full terracotta but still warm.
Read guide →$58–$95
Terracotta & Sage Centerpiece
Terracotta and sage balance warm rust focal flowers with cool sage greenery — the two colors together create the perfect desert wedding palette. This recipe works year-round for earthy aesthetics.
Read guide →$65–$105
Earthy Boho Bridal Bouquet
An earthy boho bouquet leans into desert sun-washed tones with pampas grass, dried elements, and bold protea focal flowers. This is the signature boho style for desert and outdoor weddings.
Read guide →$125–$195
Tropical Wedding Flowers
Tropical wedding florals are all about sculptural boldness — bird of paradise, anthurium, protea, and dramatic tropical foliage. This recipe is the foundation for Hawaiian, Caribbean, and destination weddings.
Read guide →$78–$125
Pink Tropical Bridal Bouquet
A pink tropical bridal bouquet brings Hawaiian drama to the bride's hands — pink anthurium, phalaenopsis orchids, and monstera foliage in a sculptural composition.
Read guide →$115–$180
White Tropical Wedding Centerpiece
White tropical is the luxe, sophisticated version of tropical — all-white anthurium, orchids, and calla lilies against dramatic monstera foliage. Perfect for luxury destination weddings and minimalist tropical aesthetics.
Read guide →$135–$215
Exotic Tropical Wedding Flowers
Exotic tropical pushes beyond standard tropical into rare territory — proteas, ginger, heliconia, and statement tropical foliage combined into truly unique arrangements.
Read guide →$165–$260
Tropical Ceremony Arch Flowers
A tropical ceremony arch combines bold focal flowers with dramatic leaf backgrounds. This recipe works best for outdoor destination venues where the tropical feeling matches the setting.
Read guide →$38–$58
All-Greenery Wedding Bouquet
An all-greenery bouquet uses 6+ foliage varieties instead of flowers — olive, eucalyptus, italian ruscus, and ferns combined for a lush botanical bouquet. It's modern, minimalist, and surprisingly difficult to do well.
Read guide →$42–$72
Eucalyptus & White Centerpiece
A eucalyptus and white centerpiece leans 70/30 toward greenery with just a few white focal flowers. It's budget-friendly, fresh-looking, and perfect for modern minimalist receptions.
Read guide →$98–$155
Tropical Leaves & White Flowers Wedding Recipe
Tropical leaves with white flowers creates a modern destination wedding aesthetic — sculptural foliage as the structure, with white phalaenopsis orchids and anthurium as bright focal accents.
Read guide →$72–$115
Moody Dark Wedding Bouquet
Moody dark bouquets embrace gothic romance — deep burgundy, black scabiosa, purple calla, and dramatic greenery. Perfect for fall weddings, evening ceremonies, and unconventional brides.
Read guide →$78–$125
Black & White Wedding Flowers
Black and white is the ultimate formal dramatic palette — pure white focal flowers against black scabiosa and dark calla lilies for a striking graphic look. Perfect for modern, black-tie, or art gallery weddings.
Read guide →$95–$155
Gothic Romantic Floral Arrangement
Gothic romantic arrangements lean fully into dark drama — deep wines, burgundies, and blacks mixed with candlelit saturated tones. Perfect for Halloween weddings, vampire-chic receptions, and alt-romance celebrations.
Read guide →$48–$78
Sage Green Wedding Centerpiece
Sage green is the quiet modern wedding color — muted, organic, and sophisticated. This centerpiece recipe builds on sage greenery with minimal white accents for a restrained modern feel.
Read guide →$78–$125
Mauve & Blush Bridal Bouquet
Mauve and blush is a gentler alternative to dusty rose — all-pink tones with muted sophistication. This recipe balances mauve focal flowers with soft blush accents for vintage romance.
Read guide →$65–$105
Yellow & White Wedding Bouquet
Yellow and white is the cheerful spring wedding palette — bright, optimistic, and rare enough to stand out. This bouquet recipe uses soft butter yellows paired with crisp whites for a sunny but elegant look.
Read guide →$82–$130
Champagne & Ivory Centerpiece
Champagne and ivory creates a warm luxurious palette — slightly golden, perfect for evening receptions and luxury estate weddings. This recipe layers warm whites with subtle gold accents.
Read guide →$68–$108
Purple & Cream Bridal Bouquet
Purple and cream is an unexpected wedding palette — deep jewel purple paired with soft cream for dramatic tonal contrast. This recipe uses purple lisianthus and deep purple callas for visual impact.
Read guide →$68–$108
Navy & Blush Centerpiece
Navy and blush is a sophisticated modern combination — blush florals as the soft focal with navy as the underlying linen or accent color. This recipe creates centerpieces where the flowers stay blush-focused.
Read guide →$52–$85
Emerald Green Wedding Flowers
Emerald green is the deepest, richest green wedding palette — more dramatic than sage, more elegant than forest. This recipe balances deep green foliage with minimal cream focal flowers.
Read guide →$58–$95
Red & Green Christmas Wedding Flowers
Red and green is the classic Christmas wedding palette — amaryllis, hypericum berries, and evergreens combined for a festive winter celebration. This recipe leans sophisticated rather than kitschy.
Read guide →$72–$115
Coral & Cream Bridal Bouquet
Coral and cream creates a beachy summer wedding palette — warm, cheerful, and slightly tropical-adjacent without going full tropical. Perfect for beach and resort weddings.
Read guide →$65–$105
Blush & Gold Centerpiece
Blush and gold is the luxury wedding staple — warm blush florals in brass or gold vessels. This recipe focuses on the florals that complement gold hardware best.
Read guide →$52–$85
Soft Sage & Cream Centerpiece
Soft sage and cream is the understated cousin to emerald green and cream — softer, more muted, more modern. This centerpiece recipe works for botanical and organic modern weddings.
Read guide →$65–$105
Apricot & Ivory Bridal Bouquet
Apricot and ivory creates a warm sunset-inspired palette — slightly deeper than pure peach, with ivory accents for softness. Perfect for golden-hour ceremonies and warm-toned fall weddings.
Read guide →$52–$85
Lavender & Gray Centerpiece
Lavender and gray is a cool-toned muted palette — soft lavender florals against silvery-gray foliage. This recipe creates restrained sophistication for modern minimalist weddings.
Read guide →$68–$108
Fuchsia & Hot Pink Wedding Bouquet
Fuchsia and hot pink is the most vibrant, celebratory pink palette available — no muted tones, no pastels, just pure bold pink in multiple saturations.
Read guide →$62–$100
Winter White & Evergreen Centerpiece
Winter white and evergreen is the classic December wedding palette — amaryllis as the hero, cedar and fir as the structure, and ivory accents for softness.
Read guide →$55–$90
Mint Green & Cream Wedding Flowers
Mint green and cream is a fresh, preppy coastal palette — pale green touches against cream focal flowers. This recipe creates bright, cheerful arrangements perfect for spring weddings.
Read guide →$72–$115
Rose Gold Wedding Bouquet
Rose gold is a trendy metallic-inspired wedding palette — warm pinks with peachy-gold undertones, paired with bronze-toned accents. This bouquet recipe captures the warm glow of rose gold in fresh flowers.
Read guide →$58–$95
Copper & Cream Autumn Centerpiece
Copper and cream autumn centerpieces lean into warm metallic fall tones — rust roses, cream peonies, and copper beech leaves in a refined fall palette.
Read guide →$72–$115
Pastel Rainbow Wedding Bouquet
A pastel rainbow bouquet uses every soft pastel tone in harmony — peach, lavender, pink, blue, cream, yellow. This is the pride-inclusive, joyful palette for couples who want playful color.
Read guide →$72–$115
Sangria & Rose Wedding Bouquet
Sangria is a rich wine-tone palette — deeper and more saturated than dusty rose, softer than pure burgundy. Perfect for fall weddings and spanish-inspired aesthetics.
Read guide →$48–$82
Sunflower & Blush Summer Bouquet
Sunflowers paired with blush is the late-summer wedding palette — rustic charm meets soft romance. This recipe softens sunflowers with blush garden roses so they don't overwhelm.
Read guide →$48–$78
Marigold & Ivory Centerpiece
Marigold and ivory creates a warm autumnal palette often used in Indian weddings and fall celebrations. Marigolds add vibrant gold-orange tones balanced with ivory softness.
Read guide →$58–$95
Dusty Pink & Eucalyptus Bouquet
Dusty pink and eucalyptus creates a soft muted bouquet — pink focal flowers generously framed by silver eucalyptus. This is the accessible blush alternative with slightly more sophistication.
Read guide →$55–$90
Neutral Desert Wedding Bouquet
A neutral desert bouquet uses only cream, tan, and soft sage tones — the most minimalist boho palette possible. Perfect for desert elopements and minimal earthy aesthetics.
Read guide →$68–$108
Raspberry & Ivory Wedding Bouquet
Raspberry and ivory combines vibrant berry pink-red tones with ivory softness — fresh, summery, and less formal than burgundy. This recipe uses raspberry dahlias and ivory garden roses for a cheerful bold bouquet.
Read guide →$78–$125
Black-Tie All-White Centerpiece
The black-tie all-white centerpiece is the formal grand wedding standard — dense, symmetrical, and entirely white. This recipe creates the kind of table centerpiece that anchors a ballroom reception.
Read guide →$115–$185
Lily of the Valley Classic Bouquet
The lily of the valley bouquet is the ultimate royal wedding statement — delicate bell-shaped blooms, unmistakable fragrance, and the most expensive common wedding stem. This recipe uses it in high quantity for maximum impact.
Read guide →$78–$125
Dahlia Focal Fall Wedding Bouquet
A dahlia-focal fall bouquet lets dahlias be the absolute stars — mixed varieties in warm fall tones, minimal supporting stems. This is for brides who want dahlias in their hands, not as accents.
Read guide →$55–$88
Blue Thistle & White Bouquet
A blue thistle and white bouquet honors Scottish heritage with silvery-blue eryngium thistles paired with cream garden roses. This is the palette for couples with Scottish roots or Celtic-inspired weddings.
Read guide →$65–$105
Burgundy & Navy Centerpiece
Burgundy and navy is the deep jewel-tone wedding palette — rich, moody, and dramatic. This centerpiece recipe balances burgundy florals with navy thistles and dark greenery for a grounded elegant feel.
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