October wedding flowers celebrate the season’s natural beauty, channeling hues of withering leaves and last sun rays.
And while dahlias and chrysanthemums are all-time fall wedding favorites, this season has many more beautiful blooms to offer.
Fall is an excellent time to embrace your creativity, incorporating perennial shrubs, tree branches, and greenery in your floral arrangements.
Of course, timeless wedding flowers like roses and peonies in romantic pastel shades are also a valid option for your October affair.
The key is to find flowers to match your wedding style and location, as florals are a pivotal point of the atmosphere.
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1. Gypsophila
Gypsophila, also known under the beautiful name baby’s breath, is a common filler flower available year-round. These tiny, clustered blooms make floral arrangements appear aerial and dreamy and are suitable for bridal bouquets, centerpieces, and various venue décor.
Although, in nature, gypsophila is always white, you may ask your florist to dye it any color to match your wedding color code.
Gypsophila’s primary benefit is its longevity. Dried gypsophila looks just like fresh and doesn’t crumble, so you can preserve a baby’s breath bridal bouquet for years as a memory.
2. Limonium
Limonium is another wildflower often used as a bouquet filler. It has an incredible range of shades, including blue, purple, yellow, pink, and white.
Limonium is versatile and works well with many garden blooms and wildflowers, including lavender, lilac, sunflowers, dahlias, and peonies. You can add it to virtually any floral arrangement, from bridal bouquets to boutonnieres or wreaths.
3. Rose
Roses, the most popular flowers in the world, are always in season and always appropriate. If you’re struggling to choose your wedding flowers, go for roses – there’s a variety to fit any style and application.
Roses are suitable for bridal bouquets, boutonnieres, interior décor – you name it. Depending on the variety, they go well with any flower, from dreamy peonies to rustic sunflowers.
4. Chrysanthemum
Chrysanthemums are a fall wedding staple, perfectly matching the atmosphere and adding texture to floral wedding arrangements. These garden flowers come in incredible color and shape selection to match your wedding style.
Chrysanthemums are suitable for boutonnieres, centerpieces, bridal bouquets, flower crowns, and cake décor.
The best thing is their versatility – chrysanthemums look equally stylish with wildflowers like sunflowers and Queen Anne’s lace, garden blooms like roses and peonies, and even some tropical cultivars like proteas.
5. Gerbera Daisy
October is the best time for a gerbera daisy bridal bouquet. While these stunning flowers come in traditional wedding color white, vibrant shades are gerbera daisy signature.
Incorporate yellow, orange, red, or pink gerbera daisies in your floral arrangements for a pop of color.
These popular garden flowers are eye-catching enough for mono bouquets, and even a single gerbera daisy in a tall vase makes a stylish table décor.
6. Lily
Lilies have endless cultivars, some of which bloom in October, including oriental, tiger, and trumpet varieties. These gorgeous flowers with an intoxicating, sweet fragrance come in any shade you wish, from white to orange-spotted.
Consider lily combinations with anthuriums, orchids, and birds of paradise for an exotic look, or roses, peonies, and dahlias to fit a traditional style.
Single lily blooms are ideal for boutonnieres, hairpieces, and cake décor. You may even place a flower on each guest’s plate as a finishing touch in your table decoration.
7. Celosia
Celosia is an unusual ornamental plant with a fluffy, brush-like head. Celosia can have red, purple, orange, yellow, pink, maroon, or white blooms and blue-green, purple, or golden foliage.
Celosia is a creative addition to your floral arrangements, giving them a modern twist. Use it with other textured florals like dahlias, carnations, peonies, Craspedia, blue thistle, or sumac.
8. Dahlia
Dahlias are iconic fall wedding flowers boasting dozens of colors ranging from white and delicate peach to deep burgundy. Some varieties feature contrasting shade combos, like red and white or pink and yellow.
Dahlias work well in bouquets, venue décor, and small accessories like boutonnieres. These garden blooms are both beautiful and practical – they are cost-effective, long-lasting, and relatively big, adding volume and texture to floral arrangements.
Most importantly, dahlias look gorgeous with any other flower variety, with no exceptions.
9. Peony
It’s easy to understand why so many brides favor peonies. Peonies are truly among the most romantic wedding flowers, featuring dozens of soft petals forming a voluminous, rounded bloom.
Peonies come in many colors, including two-toned varieties, but white and pink cultivars are all-time wedding favorites.
Since peony blooms are large, they aren’t suitable for hairpieces or boutonnieres but are ideal for bouquets, ceremony arches, and centerpieces. Mix them with roses, ranunculus, dahlias, and carnations for an endlessly dreamy look.
10. Balloon Flower
Balloon flowers are typically blue-violet, but some garden cultivars are pink and white. These delicate flowers will suit dainty brides and make great filler flowers.
However, be aware of balloon flowers’ relatively short lifespan. If you choose it for your wedding, ensure the floral arrangements are made on the day of.
Balloon flowers pair well with most wildflowers and delicate garden blooms, like peonies and anemones. Avoid mixing them with textural flowers like dahlias.
11. Goldenrod
True to its name, goldenrod boasts rich saffron yellow color. This tall plant with tiny, clustered blooms is a great way to incorporate color into a rainy October day.
Goldenrod was made for bohemian and rustic wedding floral arrangements – it pairs perfectly with sunflowers and other wild blooms. However, you may also use goldenrod in modern asymmetrical and cascading arrangements with garden or exotic flowers.
12. Dusty Miller
Think beyond flowers – the most remarkable fall wedding flower arrangements incorporate greenery, evergreen branches, and other unconventional accents. One of such stylish additions is dusty miller.
Dusty miller’s muted silver-green lacey leaves look beyond gorgeous in bouquets with white, cream, or pink flowers.
Alternatively, you may opt for an all-green combination of dusty miller and succulents or mix it with blue thistle and dried blooms for a decadent look.
13. Sumac
Sumac tree flowering plants are mainly used in medicine and as a spice, but they also make a creative wedding bouquet accent. Sumac flowers range from bright pink to deep burgundy, depending on maturity.
Sumac is ideal for decadent fall bouquets with deer red dahlias, anemones, proteas, or dried blooms. Meanwhile, sumac branch centerpieces or wreaths are unusual rustic wedding venue décor ideas.
14. Craspedia
Craspedia is another creative accent flower featuring a spherical head with dozens of tiny, densely packed blooms. In nature, Craspedia is always yellow, but florists often dye it purple, fuchsia, red, blue, and other colors.
Craspedia fits any wedding style but looks the most appropriate in rustic and preppy floral arrangements. Natural yellow Craspedia beautifully matches sunflowers and daisies.
15. Canna
If you’re looking for an exotic fall wedding flower, consider canna. These tall flowers with large, lush leaves and vibrant yellow, orange, pink, or red blooms are a colorful accent for a modern October wedding.
Even if tropical flowers don’t match your perception of a fall wedding, consider incorporating canna leaves in your floral arrangements. Apart from emerald green, they come in purple and red colors, often striped.
16. Gomphrena
Gomphrena is a tropical flower that perfectly fits in any wedding style, from alternative to rustic. The spikey globe-like blooms come in all pink, orange, red, purple, and pure white shades.
Florists don’t typically use gomphrena in mono arrangements and instead incorporate it as an accent in elaborate bouquets.
This rounded flower is pretty versatile – it looks equally well with exotic calla lilies, romantic peonies, textured dahlias, and cheerful gerbera daisies.
17. Orchid
If you had to name one exotic flower, you would most likely name orchid. It’s deservedly the most popular tropical wedding flower, boasting a wide variety and color selection.
Orchids look impeccably elegant in modern cascading bridal bouquets and are ideal for boutonnieres or hairpieces.
18. Miniature Dianthus
Not many know, but dianthus is the scientific name of carnations. Miniature dianthus, also known as mini carnation, is a short-stemmed seasonal fall flower with fragrant pink, white, yellow, red, or bi-colored blooms.
It’s a great filler flower for rustic floral arrangements. If you favor live blooms over cut flowers, consider potted dianthus centerpieces.
19. Witch Hazel
Witch hazel is a small tree with brown branches and golden-yellow blooms with a spicy scent. It’s a stylish wedding floral arrangement accent and creative venue décor.
Witch hazel looks the best with yellow, orange, red, burgundy, white, or blush flowers and lush greens. Alternatively, you may mix it with pampas grass, dried blooms, or wheat.
20. Anemone
Anemones resemble poppies – in fact, they are sometimes called poppy anemones. But while poppies bloom in early summer, anemones are in season well into late fall.
Anemones come in red, pink, blue, purple, and all-time wedding favorite, white. White and blush anemones look endlessly romantic with peonies, roses, and dusty miller. Meanwhile, a burgundy and plum anemone bouquet will suit a dramatic bridal look.
21. Perennial Sage
Perennial sage is in season for spring but can re-bloom in late fall if you cut back faded blooms.
Perennial sage comes in blue, lavender, red, and white. It makes stylish bouquet accents and venue décor.
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