20 Beautiful Flower Arrangements | Midwest Living
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20 Beautiful Flower Arrangements

Garden blooms take on fresh looks in these displays. See how to show off your flowers in gorgeous displays.
  • Prairie palette flower arrangement

    Prairie palette

    We included a few surprises in this display of field flowers. Bursts of complementary orange and salmon break up the golden monochrome, and formal, old-school gladiolas add a disparate structural element. Guests at a dining table would view this arrangement from the sides rather than from above, so be sure to check all the angles as you design a display. 

    Plants in this arrangement:
    Gladiola, yellow
    Dahlia, blush
    Black-eyed Susan
    Coreopsis ‘Pumpkin Pie’
    Dahlia, yellow
    Dwarf marigold, yellow
    Zinnia ‘Profusion Double Fire’
    Sunflower
    Hosta, green variegated

     

     

     

  • Garden variety flower arrangement

    Garden variety 

    An unexpected strand of tomato vine adds shape and character to a casual display that will evolve as the fruit ripens.

    What we used in this arrangement:
    Cherry tomato
    Coneflower 'Cheyenne Spirit'
    Queen Anne's lace
    German garlic

     

  • Artfully ombre flower arrangement

    Artfully ombre

    A horizontal display is an inventive variation on the traditional bouquet and plays beautifully on a dining table. In our display, we grouped blooms by hue and framed them with feathery ferns. To use a wooden vessel, wrap floral foam tightly in several layers of plastic wrap, leaving the top exposed. Then place a sheet of foil beneath the plastic.

    Plants in our arrangement:
    Delphinium
    Fern
    Dahlia, burgundy
    Sweet pea, blue
    Cosmos ‘Sonata’, dark pink
    Zinnia, magenta
    Celosia spicata
    Zinnia, red
    Dahlia, light pink
    Dahlia, white
    Sweet pea, pink
    Dahlia, white
    Cosmos ‘Snow Sonata’  

     

  • Lushly layered flower arrangement

    Lushly layered

    For a full, textured display, start with a foundation of subtle greenery (or our brushy pink astilbe). Add soft tendrils that drape over the brim. Place a large, eye-catching flower (or three, if you don’t have any giant ones) in a central spot. Tuck in accent blooms or foliage to fill and balance the arrangement. A crumpled ball of chicken wire secures these cuttings.

    Flowers in this arrangement:
    Astilbe ‘Younique Silvery Pink’
    Nigella, white
    Dahlia ‘Snowbound’
    Sweet pea, pink

  • Bare minimalist flower arrangement

    Bare minimalist

    A simple-yet-chic arrangement proves that, yes, less can be more. Oversize foliage and one focal bloom create a stylish (and super-easy) display.

    Plants in this arrangement:
    Fern
    Caladium, tricolor
    Peony, magenta

  • Three in a row flower arrangement

    Three in a row

    It takes no more than a few flowering stems to create a pleasing arrangement in a small vase. But grouping several similar arrangements results in considerably more impact.

    Plants in these arrangements: 
    Catmint (Nepeta)
    Cosmos bipinnatus
    Celosia spicata, magenta
    Globe amaranth, purple (Gomphrena globosa)

  • Mix it up

    Add variety to your bouquet by mixing herbs with flowers. Fresh snipped herbs top off a sweet collection of dianthus, spirea, purple pansies, pink rose geranium and purple violas.

  • Sunny side

    Combine different colors of the same flower for a striking bouquet. From yellow to orange to black, all sunflowers bring bright summer sun inside.

  • Marigolds and roses

    Marigolds and roses

    Mix an elegant flower like roses with the humble marigold for a striking mix. Here, a stoneware pitcher holds 'Yves Piaget' roses, 'Durango Red' and 'Red Gem' marigolds, and a few Persian carpet zinnias (Zinia haageana) that are marigoldlike in appearance.

  • Dairy Fresh

    Dairy-fresh blossoms

    Peony blossoms on short stems fill old cream bottles in this antique wire carrier. Even when the stems are cut short, the blooms still look extravagant and smell heavenly. 

  • Teatime

    Teatime

    A dozen magenta peony buds and snippets of soft yellow honeysuckle in a stoneware teapot make a charming bouquet. 

  • Color guard

    Unify three containers of three colors of flowers by including one that blends the other two shades. This scheme transitions from white to dark pink via the white-and-pink hydrangeas between.

  • Traditional favorites

    Match the personality of your flower to the personality of the vase. Here, a fistful of the old-time favorite peonies billows from an equally old-fashioned pitcher.

  • Old-Fashioned

    Old-fashioned display

    Tufts of chestnut flowers peek out of a peony bouquet in this cobalt sap bucket. The bouquet is actually in a mason jar inside the bucket—the jar helps stabilize the bucket. 

  • Casual ease

    Even the simplest of containers can make for a charming vase. Here, stems of herbs (try fennel or mustard seed) stuck in Mason jars communicate summertime ease.

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