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Last Updated: June 7, 2026
A bride came into the shop a while back with her phone out, showing me a bouquet she’d found on Pinterest. Loose, wild, trailing greenery, dried pampas tucked in with fresh garden roses. She wanted to make it herself and wanted to know if it was actually doable.
I told her the truth: boho is one of the most forgiving styles you can attempt as a first-timer. The look is supposed to feel organic and a little imperfect. That’s not a bug - it’s the whole point.
What I also told her: there’s more structure underneath that “effortless” look than most people realize. You need the right flowers, the right tools, and a practice run before the big day.
That’s what this guide covers. Fifteen specific bouquet ideas, a full supply checklist, step-by-step assembly, and honest advice on when to DIY and when to hand it off.
Quick Summary: What Makes a Bouquet “Boho”?
A boho wedding bouquet is defined by:
- Loose, organic shapes - no tight round balls of roses
- Textured greenery and trailing vines - eucalyptus, ferns, ivy
- Wildflower or garden-style blooms - ranunculus, cosmos, chamomile, pampas grass
- Earthy or romantic palettes - dusty rose, terracotta, blush, cream, burgundy, sage
- Natural materials for the handle - twine, ribbon, dried grasses
Think of it as: a bride who wandered through a meadow and gathered the most interesting things she found. That’s the look you’re building toward.
Why Boho Works So Well for DIY Brides
Boho bouquets are one of the best entry points for DIY wedding flowers, and there’s a practical reason for that. The style embraces asymmetry and imperfection. You don’t need perfect symmetry. You don’t need to wire every stem to a millimeter. First-timers can pull it off.
On top of that, boho leans heavily on dried elements and greenery, which are far cheaper than premium focal blooms. A mostly-dried bouquet can be assembled weeks in advance, needs no refrigeration, and won’t wilt if your ceremony runs long in the heat. For outdoor summer weddings, especially, that matters a lot. Check out Summer Wedding Bouquet Ideas That Actually Hold Up in the Heat if that’s your situation.
15 Boho Wedding Bouquet Ideas to Inspire You
Pampas Grass & Blush Rose Bouquet

Dried pampas plumes with fresh blush garden roses and soft eucalyptus. Wildly popular on Pinterest for good reason, the contrast between the feathery pampas and the roses is exactly the texture play that makes boho work. Wrap the handle in ivory ribbon with a loose bow.
Wildflower Meadow Bouquet

Cosmos, chamomile, ranunculus, and baby’s breath in a loose, gathered cascade. Use minimal greenery here. Let the blooms carry it. Source from a local farmers’ market if you can; these varieties are usually available in season and far less expensive than from a wholesaler.
Dried Boho Bouquet (No Fresh Flowers)

100% dried pampas grass, dried lavender, bunny tail grass, lunaria (money plant), and preserved leaves. This is the smart choice for destination weddings or any situation where you can’t keep fresh flowers cold. Assembled weeks ahead. Keeps forever. And honestly, it photographs beautifully.
Terracotta & Rust Bouquet

Burnt orange ranunculus, terracotta dahlias, chocolate cosmos, and rust-toned dried florals. The warm palette reads rich and intentional, not accidental. This one is made for fall boho weddings, barn venues, outdoor ceremonies, and late September light.
Eucalyptus-Forward Greenery Bouquet

Let eucalyptus do the heavy lifting. Add white lisianthus, which holds up extremely well and is far more affordable than the garden roses it resembles, and a few blush spray roses for color. Minimal, but it works.
Cascading Vine Bouquet

Add trailing ivy or jasmine vine for a dramatic, flowing look. Great for taller brides or outdoor ceremonies where movement in the bouquet really shows up in photos. Tuck the vines in last, angled downward, after everything else is bound.
Pampas & Dried Lavender Bouquet

Ultra low-maintenance. Tie with twine, leaving the ends raw for extra rustic character. This is probably the easiest build on the list, and it smells like something you’d find in a Provençal field, which is never a complaint.
Garden Rose & Fern Bouquet

Garden roses in cream or blush, layered with feathery ferns and maidenhair. Lush and layered. Feels like a secret garden. The ferns are your best friend here. They’re inexpensive, they fill space beautifully, and they hold up well without refrigeration for several hours.
Thistle & Wildflower Bouquet

Scottish thistle adds texture and a touch of purple that works well with blush and cream palettes. It’s stiffer than most stems, which actually helps with bouquet structure. Works beautifully in outdoor and barn settings.
White Boho Bouquet

Anemones, white ranunculus, white cosmos, and silver-leafed eucalyptus. Elegant and genuinely romantic. White palettes can look stark if you’re not careful; the silver eucalyptus softens it and pulls the whole thing together.
Sunflower Boho Bouquet

Use the smaller sunflower varieties, not the giant single-stem kind, mixed with chamomile, wheat stalks, and greenery. Perfect for outdoor summer weddings. Keep them hydrated right up to the ceremony; sunflowers drink a lot, and they’ll tell you if they’re thirsty.
Peony & Trailing Ribbon Bouquet

Oversized blush peonies with loose trailing silk ribbons in cream, dusty rose, and sage. Low on greenery, high on drama. One thing to know: peonies are seasonal (late spring into early summer), so check availability before you commit to this look for a fall wedding.
Dried Grasses & Seed Pod Bouquet

Pure texture. Bunny tail grass, poppy pods, pampas, and dried ferns. Zero maintenance, incredibly photogenic, and honestly, one of the more interesting bouquets on this list to build. No water tubes, no refrigeration, no race against the clock.
Protea & Eucalyptus Bouquet

Statement protea flowers with blue-green eucalyptus. Unique, distinctive, and not something every guest has seen at a dozen other weddings. Protea is sturdier than it looks and holds up well on a warm day, a practical bonus on top of the visual impact.
Berry & Herb Bouquet

Rosemary sprigs, sage leaves, green berries, and small roses. Fragrant, visually layered, and a genuinely good choice for late summer or fall. The herbs add scent without being overwhelming, and they hold up well without water for several hours.
Your DIY Boho Bouquet Supply Checklist
Use this before you order anything - it’ll save you time and money.
Core Florals
| Item | What to Look For | Avg. Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh or faux garden roses | Blush, ivory, or dusty rose | $15–$30/bunch |
| Ranunculus | Peach, coral, or cream | $12–$20/bunch |
| Dried pampas grass | Mini bundles work best for bouquets | $10–$18 |
| Baby’s breath | Fresh or dried, full bunches | $8–$14 |
| Dried lavender | Pre-bundled for ease | $10–$16 |
Greenery & Texture
| Item | Why It Matters | Avg. Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Eucalyptus stems | Filler + fragrance | $8–$15 |
| Ferns or maidenhair | Airy, delicate look | $6–$12 |
| Bunny tail grass | Adds movement | $8–$12 |
| Ivy or trailing vine | For cascading styles | $5–$10 |
Tools & Mechanics (Don’t Skip These)
What I use in the shop: a quality pair of floral scissors, a stem stripper, green floral tape, and paddle wire for securing heavier stems. These are the four things I’d reach for before anything else.
| Item | Why You Need It | Avg. Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Floral tape (green) | Holds stems together invisibly | $4–$7 |
| Paddle wire / floral wire | Securing heavy stems | $5–$9 |
| Sharp floral scissors | Clean cuts = longer life | $12–$22 |
| Bouquet holder | Saves hours of stripping | $6–$10 |
| Water tubes (aquapicks) | Keeps fresh flowers hydrated | $6–$12 |
See all my go-to design tools here: The 8 Floral Design Tools I Use Every Single Day
Finishing Touches
| Item | Effect | Avg. Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Silk or satin ribbon | Classic wrap | $5–$10 |
| Twine or jute | Rustic finish | $4–$7 |
| Pearl-head pins | Decorative bouquet wrap detail | $5–$8 |
| Dried seed pods / lunaria | Visual filler + texture | $8–$14 |
Cost tip: If you’re going mostly dried, your whole supply run can come in under $60. If you plan on using fresh florals, budget $80–$120 for a lush bridal bouquet. Order 20% more stems than you think you need.
How to Build Your Boho Bouquet
You don’t need a floral course. You need a system. Here’s the one I’d walk any first-timer through:
Step 1: Strip your stems. Remove all leaves that will fall below the binding point. A stem stripper saves your fingers and speeds this up considerably.
Step 2: Build your focal cluster first. Pick 3–5 of your star blooms - roses, peonies, ranunculus. Hold them loosely in one hand and rotate as you add. Don’t grip too tight.
Step 3: Add greenery around the outside. Tuck eucalyptus and ferns in at angles - not straight up. Let some drape down. This is where the organic shape starts to happen.
Step 4: Fill gaps with texture. Add dried grasses, baby’s breath, or seed pods. Push stems in at different depths - not all at the same level. That variation is the boho magic.
Step 5: Add trailing elements last. Ivy or longer vines go in at the very end, angled downward. Don’t try to build around them early - they’ll get in the way.
Step 6: Bind with floral tape. Wrap tightly, starting just below where your hand grips. Spiral down 3–4 inches. This is non-negotiable - the bouquet falls apart without it.
Step 7: Wrap the handle. Start from the top of the binding and wrap ribbon or twine down to the bottom of the stems. Secure with a pearl pin or small bow.
Step 8: Trim the stems. Cut straight across so the bouquet sits flat. Leave 6–8 inches of stem below the binding.
Who This Works For (And Who Should Hire a Florist)
This DIY approach is a good fit if:
- You’re crafty or have made floral arrangements before
- You’re making your own bouquet or a small bridal party’s
- You have 2–3 weeks to practice, and time for one practice run
- You’re working with a budget of under $200 for all bouquets
You might want to bring in help if:
- You need 10+ bouquets with no practice time
- You’re using very fragile or expensive blooms - orchids, garden roses, in volume
- You have a black-tie or ultra-formal aesthetic (boho may not fit anyway)
- You’re getting married in extreme heat with no climate control
Avoid These Common DIY Boho Bouquet Mistakes
Too many focal flowers, not enough filler. Filler is what gives boho its wild, full look. If it feels tight and tidy, add more greenery.
Skipping the floral tape. The bouquet will fall apart. No exceptions. I’ve seen it happen at the worst possible moments.
Ordering fresh flowers too early. Order fresh stems to arrive 2–3 days before the wedding. Not sooner. And process them properly the moment they arrive - that step alone will determine how they hold up on the day.
Handle too short. Leave at least 8 inches of stem below the binding. You can always trim more; you can’t add it back.
Skipping the practice run. Make one test bouquet 2–3 weeks before the wedding. Use cheap grocery store flowers. That one practice run will teach you more than any video will.
Budget vs. Premium Paths
| Materials | Budget Build (~$50–$70) | Premium Build (~$120–$150) |
|---|---|---|
| Florals | Dried-only: pampas grass, lavender, bunny tails | Fresh garden roses + dried texture mix |
| Greenery | Eucalyptus only | Eucalyptus + ferns + trailing ivy |
| Wrap | Jute twine | Silk ribbon + pearl pins |
| Tools | Basic floral scissors + tape | Full floral kit: scissors, wire, stripper, holder |
| Result | Minimal, romantic, lasting | Lush, layered, photogenic |
Both paths work. The dried-only bouquet photographs beautifully and will survive an outdoor summer ceremony without flinching. Don’t let anyone tell you it’s the lesser option.
What Should You Buy First?
For the first-time DIY bride on a budget, start with a dried-flower bouquet kit. Look for bundles that include pampas grass, bunny tails, dried lavender, and preserved eucalyptus. Add a roll of green floral tape and a pair of sharp floral scissors. Total: under $60.
For the bride who wants fresh flowers, buy your focal blooms and fresh-cut eucalyptus locally. Local wholesalers and Costco often beat online prices on fresh stems. Then order your floral tape, stem stripper, and bouquet holder on Amazon to arrive a few days ahead of time.
For the bride making multiple bouquets, invest in a full floral tool kit. Paddle wire, stem stripper, floral scissors, and foam handles. These make the process dramatically faster and cleaner when you’re building 4–6 bouquets in a single session.
Simplest recommended setup for most DIY brides: dried pampas + preserved eucalyptus + one bunch of blush spray roses (optional fresh) + floral tape + jute twine. That’s it. That’s the bouquet.
Frequently Asked Questions
What flowers are used in boho wedding bouquets?
Ranunculus, garden roses, cosmos, chamomile, pampas grass, dried lavender, baby’s breath, eucalyptus, and wildflowers are all common. Dried and preserved elements, bunny tail grass, lunaria, and seed pods are popular for adding rustic texture without the maintenance of fresh blooms.
How much does a DIY boho wedding bouquet cost?
Typically $40–$120, depending on whether you go fresh or dried. A dried-only bouquet, including all supplies, usually comes in under $60. Fresh flowers run $80–$120 for a full bridal bouquet.
Can I make my own boho wedding bouquet?
Yes. Boho is one of the most beginner-friendly styles you can attempt because the loose, organic shape actually benefits from imperfect construction. The key requirements: the right tools, proper conditioning of fresh flowers, and at least one practice run before the wedding.
How do I keep my boho bouquet fresh on my wedding day?
Keep fresh-stem bouquets in a vase of cool water until 30 minutes before the ceremony. Use water tubes (aquapicks) to hydrate individual stems inside the bouquet. Keep it in a cool, shaded spot, away from direct sun and heat sources.
What ribbon is used on boho bouquets?
Most boho bouquets use silk ribbon in ivory, dusty rose, or sage, wrapped loosely with long trailing ends. Jute twine is popular for a more rustic finish. Pearl-head pins are often used to secure the wrap and add a finishing detail.
How far in advance can I make a boho bouquet?
Dried bouquets can be made weeks in advance with no issues. Fresh-flower bouquets should be assembled 1–2 days before the wedding. Do your practice run 2–3 weeks out, using inexpensive grocery-store flowers.
Closing Thoughts
Boho bouquets have been trending for years now, and unlike many floral trends, I think I understand why they stick. The style gives you real permission to work imperfectly. That’s rare in wedding planning, where everything else seems to demand precision and perfection. With a boho bouquet, the imperfections are the point.
Start with the dried-only build if you’re uncertain. It’s forgiving, it’s affordable, and it’s more beautiful than people expect. If you want to add a few fresh stems, do it, but give yourself that practice run first.
If you’ve made a boho bouquet for your wedding, or you’re in the middle of planning one, drop a comment below and tell me what style you went with. I read each one.
Til next time,







