Our Florist Swears By These Wedding Flower Trends for 2025

If you’re getting married this year, congratulations! We’re so excited for your big day and to make it as special as your unique story.

We provide two options for your wedding flowers, Ready to Wear Wedding Packages and our Bespoke Wedding Floristry Service, as explained by our head florist, Nicola.

“Our ready to wear flowers have been meticulously designed by our specialist florist with the utmost quality and attention to detail. There's an option for every wedding aesthetic, from classic and timeless, to soft and whimsical, to fun and vibrant. My personal favourites are the Wild Whimsy Collection and the Wild Meadow Collection,” she says.

“Our bespoke service is a highly personalised option to create something that’s one of a kind,” Nicola continues. “You have a dedicated consultation with us, where we discuss your wedding’s style, colour palette and overall aesthetic, as well as your favourite flowers, colours and designs. We then work to ensure this is incorporated into your flowers to exactly match your vision.”

And a great place to start with your wedding flowers? Taking into account what’s trending in 2025 (if you want to, of course). 

Mass flowers

Instead of traditional mixed arrangements, mass floral designs shine a light on one particular flower in abundance. “I’ve seen a focus on the flowers themselves, using large bundles of a single variety with less foliage. This creates a bold, asymmetrical look,” says Nicola. 

Perfect for minimalistic weddings, or if you’re a fan of one particular flower, popular blooms for this trend include roses, peonies, tulips, orchids and hydrangeas. As well as your bouquet, this trend could also be applied to your ceremony backdrop, using a wall or arch covered entirely in one flower variety. It could also work for your table centrepiece and for lining the aisle. Blending simplicity with luxury, this trend effortlessly creates a unified, high-end aesthetic.

Monochromatic colour schemes

“Monochromatic colour schemes are popular this year, where you use one specific colour and a range of corresponding tints, tones and shades,” says Nicola. “Flowers with monochromatic colours have a timeless and elegant feel, but also create impact and photograph really well.”

By focusing on one colour, monochromatic designs allow the texture, shape, and form of each flower to take centre stage, creating a sophisticated, cohesive look. A base colour is chosen, and then different tints and tones of that colour are explored to create variety and dimension. For foliage, you could match it to the chosen colour scheme, or use complementary shades to enhance the overall look.

For example, if you’ve chosen a white or ivory colour palette, flower varieties such as roses, peonies, calla lilies, ranunculus, and hydrangeas all come in varying shades of white or ivory.

Heritage influences

“I’ve seen a rising trend of heritage influences in wedding flowers, which has a timeless, organic feel,” says Nicola. “This could be potentially inspired by the classic, cosy design style of American filmmaker Nancy Meyers, who is famed for movies like The Holiday, What Women Want, and The Parent Trap.”

Weaving nostalgia and meaning into your wedding, heritage style flowers are all about embracing tradition or personal and sentimental value. You could incorporate flowers that possess a special meaning to your family or your partner’s, or use flowers that have been traditionally used in family weddings before yours. For example, you could pick flowers from your grandmother’s garden, or use blooms that were in your parents' wedding bouquet.

Eclectic styles 

Where no rules apply, eclectic flower styles involve embracing a mix of colours, textures and unconventional flower pairings to result in an artistic, creative look. 

You could combine bright, vibrant hues with soft, gentle shades, or use non-traditional blooms like wildflowers (think poppies, bluebells, and primrose), and contrast them with bold, exotic flowers like orchids and hibiscus. You could even use dried pampas grass, ferns, berries, and succulents for texture, and finding seasonal, local, or foraged flowers will also lend an eclectic, natural feel.

Don’t be afraid to incorporate mismatched arrangements too, with bouquets, centrepieces, installations and floral decor appearing free-spirited and asymmetrical, rather than structured.


Whether you choose to incorporate these 2025 wedding flower trends into your big day or not, your wedding flowers are all about you - your personality, your style, your favourite flowers and colours, and we can help you every step of the way to turn your vision into a reality.

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