Meanings of Winter Wedding Flowers
What Flowers in Season Say to Your Guests
One of the best things about winter wedding flowers is that you can mix interesting embellishments into a floral centerpiece naturally. Accent your wintery bouquets and arrangements with pine cones, berries, ornamental balls, fir branches, ivy, holly leaves, eucalyptus, or wheat stems.
If you want to choose your winter wedding flowers based on their meaning, you could even have a nicely printed card next to your centerpieces explaining what your flowers mean and why you chose them. Perhaps there is even an interesting story behind the flowers that you could tell. Guests love stories, and your flower arrangements present the perfect opportunity to tell one. Here is a list of flowers that are in season during the winter, and what they represent:
- Bells of Ireland (green): good luck
- Amaryllis (red or white): pride or pastoral poetry
- Anemone (blue, pink, red, and white): Forsaken
- Camellias (white): you’re adorable
- Camelias (pink): longing for you
- Casa Blanca Lily or Star Gazer Lily (White): purity, majesty, it is heavenly to be with you
- Daffodil (Yellow): regard, you’re the only one, the sun always shines when I’m with you, you are the only one
- Holly (Green with Red Berries): defense and domestic happiness
- Narcissus (White or Yellow): egotism, formality, stay as sweet as you are
- Forget-me-nots (Blue): true love, memories
- Tulips (in general): perfect lover
- Red Tulips: believe me, a declaration of love
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