From First Petalto Final Dance.
Wildflowers, dried grasses, and trailing amaranth — woven into installations that make your venue feel like it grew from the earth overnight.
From the market at dawn
to the last slow dance.
Chapter I · The Conversation
Where does your vision live?
We sit together — sometimes in your kitchen, sometimes over a shared screen — and you show me the images that make your chest ache a little. Barn beams. Overgrown hedgerows. A grandmother's garden in late August. That's where we begin.
“She asked me to describe my wedding in three words. I said: damp earth, gold light, and belonging. She sent me a sample arrangement the next morning.”
— Nadia & Callum — Sonoma barn ceremony
Chapter II · The Market
Before the city wakes.
Headlights cut through the cold. The flower market smells like wet concrete and something impossibly sweet. I walk the aisles slowly — touching, smelling, holding stems to the light — sourcing only what's perfect for your day.
What comes home with me
Garden roses still closed tight. Dried pampas in full plume. Trailing amaranth, almost too heavy to carry. Eucalyptus that fills the van with silver-green scent. Whatever the season offers that no one else noticed.
Chapter III · The Studio
Hands that have done this before.
The studio becomes a controlled wilderness. Every stem conditioned, every wire placed with intention. Boutonnieres bound in linen thread. Cascading bouquets laid on kraft paper like sleeping things.
“Walking into the studio the night before felt like walking into a garden that had been folded and pressed into something you could hold.”
— Priya & Marco — hillside elopement, Big Sur
Chapter IV · The Installation
Ladders against ceremony arches.
The venue is quiet when I arrive. I work in the soft light before guests, before music, before the day becomes what it will be. The arch goes up last — always. It needs to be seen for the first time when you walk toward it.
What pampas grass does in golden hour
It catches the light differently than any other element — the plumes go warm amber, then almost white, then amber again as the sun moves. We position it knowing this. Every installation is designed for 6pm.
Chapter V · The Reception
When the flowers glow.
The day has deepened. Centerpieces reflect in empty wine glasses. Someone reaches out to touch a petal and then stops, not wanting to disturb it. This is the moment everything was for.
You're not hiring a vendor.
You're inviting an artist.
Every Bloom wedding begins weeks before the day itself. Here's what happens between your first message and the last petal.
5am, two days before
The market before the city wakes.
I walk the aisles alone — touching stems, holding roses to the light, choosing only what's perfect for your specific day. Nothing is ordered from a catalog. Everything is chosen by hand, the morning it arrives.
The evening before
Hands that have done this ten thousand times.
Every arrangement is built on a workbench that smells of green stems and linen thread. Boutonnieres. Cascading bouquets. Table runners designed to look like they fell naturally from the sky.
Morning of, before guests arrive
The arch goes up last.
I arrive when the venue is still quiet. The ceremony arch is always the final piece — it needs to be seen for the first time by you, walking toward it, not by caterers setting tables.
The moments they
still talk about.
“We interviewed four florists. The others showed us Pinterest boards. Bloom showed us photographs of her hands at the flower market at 5am. We cried. We hired her that afternoon. The arch she built made our guests go silent when they walked in.”
“I'm a wedding planner. I've sourced florals for 60+ weddings. Bloom is the only florist I've ever given a standing referral to. She understands light — how pampas grass catches golden hour, how ranunculus looks different by candlelight. She designs for the whole day.”
“Our elopement was in a meadow with twelve guests. She drove four hours, arrived before dawn, and built something into the hillside oak tree that looked like it had been growing there for a hundred years. I still can't explain how she did it.”
Venues we've worked with
Your wedding date
is still open.
Bloom takes a limited number of weddings each season. If you're reading this, there's still time — but the flowers don't wait.
No commitment. Just a conversation about your day.
Build your own bouquet.
A hands-on Saturday morning for couples who want to feel what goes into a Bloom wedding before booking. You'll leave with a wildflower arrangement and a much better sense of what you want.
- 2-hour guided studio session
- All materials provided
- Small groups of 8 max
- Coffee, pastries, and good conversation