- 19 Mar 2024
Elevate Your Space With These Spring Floral Arrangement Ideas
Flower lovers can enjoy a strong garden all year, but spring is usually the time of year with the most flowers. After a long winter, dormant and patient bulbs suddenly sprout from the ground and burst into a stunning color.
From poppies to tulips to paperwhites to delphiniums to daffodils and more, we have ideas for spring flowers. All in all, these spring flower arrangements will surely add elegance to your home.
Bright Tulips
At the start of spring, color returns to our homes: yellow daffodils, and multi-colored tulips appear in our front yards, and pastel hues dominate our wardrobes. Whether you’re creating a centerpiece for Easter, a centerpiece for Passover, or simply for the sake of it, let these lighter, warmer hues guide your spring flower arrangements.
Filled with white tulips, yellow tulips, and peach blossoms, this simple yet statement centerpiece showcases the best of spring’s blooms and colors. Perfect for a coffee table or the focal point of a holiday dinner table.
Paperwhites
Forced paperwhites are a type of daffodil-like narcissus found in garden stores during the winter months, but they are native to early spring blooms. On the last day of the season, put a few in a bark vase and top with moss. It’s the perfect end-of-season decoration.
Pretty Poppies
Who said you need a ton of flowers to create a focal point? Put citrus-colored poppies into bud vases of the same color to create a beautiful spring vase that will make a statement.
Branches Galore
Push branches of early-blooming trees and shrubs to hasten the onset of spring. The pink cherry blossoms are scattered along the bottom of the rustic trough, while the white dogwood and the spirea add a natural beauty to the view from the armchair.
The branches are supported by chicken wire that’s been bent to support the container’s liner. The florist’s moss and lichen cover the support in a sylvan pattern.
Deep Blue Delphinium and Larkspur
Blue-violet delphinium and Larkspur stems create a delicate and luxurious arrangement. This idea has an ombré look. You can also match your table accessories. Here, the blue vase has a monochrome look.
Domed Roses
This arching dome is framed in 19th-century blown glass compote and was made with a hand-picked collection of garden roses available in a limited palette of soft hues. The flowers were placed on the vase one at a time, with a floral frog holding them in place.
Eggshell Cups
Eggshell vases are hollowed-out shells that naturally look beautiful as vases for small flower arrangements. These small arrangements can be used on their own or as part of a larger arrangement, making them a great addition to your table settings.
Oversized Urn
Are you looking for a large flower arrangement for your home? Look no further than this urn arrangement featuring Kousa Dogwood, Mock Orange, Viburnum, Mountain Laurel, and Garden Rose.
Lilacs
Purple is the color of spring, and this lilac arrangement is full of height and drama. Use a serving bowl in your kitchen or porcelain cupboard.
Tulip and Peony Mix
For this soft-toned arrangement, Kevin used silky tulips, green snowball viburnum, large single-petalled peonies, and the soft petals of fragrant geraniums.
Fishbowl Garden
Do you want to twist a standard flower arrangement? Think of this garden in fishbowls. It has pitcher plant flowers, asparagus ferns, echeveria, aeonium, tree peonies, paphiopedilum, lotus pods, and scabiosa seed heads.
Tree Peonies
In this arrangement, Kevin gathered large leaves from variegated hostas—a plant commonly used in gardens but rarely in arrangements—to form a sturdy base for tree peonies, and a lady’s mantle.
Mother’s Day Blooms
When it comes to Mother’s Day flowers, there’s no better way to say “I love you” than with a bouquet that feels like a big hug. The candy colors, the mixed textures, and the varying sizes all lend a homey, spontaneous feel, especially when the “vase” is lovingly made from something you found at the flea market.
With plenty of space for water below the narrow opening, a yellow teapot is an ideal vessel to hold a large bouquet of tulips or hyacinths, peonies, or forget-me-nots.
Champagne Flute Vessels
Flower arrangement tulips lisianthus wax flowers ranunculus similar colors. Four separate arrangements were placed in champagne flutes. A great, one-of-a-kind vessel for flowers.
Daffodils Only
The daffodils here are placed in a plain vase, which shows off the beautiful center of the daffodils with their various shades of color. However, daffodils emit a chemical that is toxic to other plants, so they should be left alone in your arrangement.
Low Centerpiece
Hydrangeas, dusty miller, sea thistle, roses, echinops, astrantia, mountain laurel, clematis, lady’s mantle, and blueberries are all featured in this modest centerpiece.
Bluebells
Mix Spanish bluebells and fluffy chive blooms for a textured arrangement. Put them in beautiful vases like the one shown here for a beautiful spring display.
Bulb Central
There’s something magical about the sight of a huge bouquet of hyacinth or daffodils springing up from the ground, but it’s not quite the same when it’s just a few tiny flowers in a small vase. Recreate this springtime ritual by arranging several clusters of the same color flowers in clay pots and terracotta urns.
Tulip Arrangement
Create a tulip bouquet like Kevin’s by placing a large bouquet of solid and colorful tulips in the vase. The gold stripes in the vase will complement the flowers but not overpower them.
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