That looseness is harder to pull off than it looks. Boho bouquets live and die on texture: pampas grass, dried seed pods, trailing amaranth, a spiky thistle where you’d expect another rose. Get the mix right and it reads effortless. Get it wrong and it just reads unfinished.
So we pulled the boho wedding bouquets that actually nail it, from real L&L weddings and styled shoots, across every palette from moody and earthy to soft blush. Whether you’re drawn to a giant protea statement, an all-pampas neutral, or a wildflower clutch you could almost grow yourself, click through any look to see the full day. For more, browse our Real Weddings directory.
Our Favorite Boho Wedding Bouquets
First up: boho bouquets spotted on real L&L weddings and styled shoots. Click any link to see the full day.
White Protea and Pincushion Statement Bouquet

If you want one bouquet that announces the whole boho theme before anyone reads the invitation, this is it. A fat white king protea anchors the middle, orange pincushion proteas and blue thistle pull in the unexpected color, and pampas grass keeps it loose at the edges. Nothing matches, and that’s the entire point.
See Dusti and Will’s Georgetown, TX Wedding →
Succulent and Protea Desert Bouquet

Succulents in a bouquet sound like a gimmick until you see them packed against protea and trailing ferns. The fleshy rosettes hold their shape all day, which matters more than you’d think when the bouquet is photographed from getting-ready through the last dance. Built for a desert backdrop, but it works anywhere you want texture over petals.
See this Joshua Tree Bouquet Shoot →
Pink Protea and Blue Thistle Bouquet

A big pink protea sitting next to spiky blue thistle is the kind of contrast a florist either gets immediately or talks you out of. Don’t let them talk you out of it. The roses soften the whole thing so it reads romantic instead of prickly.
See this Bohemian Bridal Portrait →
Dark Banksia and Moody Rose Bouquet

This is the bouquet for the bride who finds blush a little boring. Deep roses, woody banksia pods, and foliage left deliberately untamed, all in earthy tones that lean closer to the forest than the flower shop. It looks gathered on a walk, which is exactly the look that takes a good florist to fake.
See this Woodland Bridal Session →
White Rose and Wild Thistle Bouquet

Loose, pale, and full of grasses, this one proves boho doesn’t have to mean bold color. White roses do the heavy lifting while thistle and dried grasses add the scruffy texture that keeps it from looking like a bridal-shop default. Soft from a distance, interesting up close.
See this Coastal Texas Styled Shoot →
Cascading Bouquet with Trailing Amaranth

The long reddish-purple amaranth spilling out the bottom is what makes this a cascade instead of a posy, and it’s worth asking your florist for by name. Abundant greenery, white and pink blooms, and a shape that moves when she walks. Best held low so the trail actually shows.
See Rachelle and Mark’s Berry Farm Wedding →
All-Pampas and Dried Flower Bouquet

Almost entirely pampas grass and dried stems in soft natural tones, which makes it the rare bouquet you could keep on a shelf for years afterward. It photographs huge and feathery against a dark dress or a stone wall. If you’re a winter bride who’s tired of seeing the same red roses, start here.
See Becky and Sean’s Castle Wedding →
Dried Grass and Seed Pod Bouquet

Muted to the point of nearly neutral, this bouquet is all dried grasses, seed pods, and quiet flowers. It’s the modern, pared-back end of boho, the version that suits a clean dress and a city setting. Understated, but nobody’s going to mistake it for plain.
See Sylvia and Alexander’s Amsterdam Wedding →
Dried Bloom Bouquet with Long Ribbon

Dried flowers and pampas again, but the long ribbon trailing down is doing real work here. It draws the eye downward and adds movement to an otherwise still arrangement. Splurge on a silk ribbon, not the satin kind from the craft store, and the whole bouquet looks more expensive.
See this Boho Castle Styled Shoot →
Dried Greenery Hoop Bouquet

A hoop bouquet is the boho swing for the fences, and this one keeps it tasteful with dried elements and greenery wrapped around the ring. It’s lightweight, which your arms will appreciate during a long hiking elopement. Just know it photographs best held off to the side, not clutched at the waist.
See Sadye and Matthew’s Waterfall Elopement →
Asymmetrical Eucalyptus and Dark Rose Bouquet

Deliberately lopsided, with eucalyptus shooting out one side and dark red roses weighting the other. The asymmetry is the boho tell, because a perfectly round bouquet reads traditional no matter what you put in it. Trailing ribbons finish the off-kilter look.
See this Joshua Tree Anniversary Shoot →
Purple and Peach Bouquet with Ferns

Purple and peach is an underrated boho combination, warm and cool at the same time, and the ferns keep it from getting too sweet. A long dark ribbon grounds the softer colors. This is a good template if you want color without going full rainbow.
See Rachael and Nick’s Outdoor Wedding →
Fern and Trailing Amaranth Bouquet

Heavy on fern fronds and hanging amaranth, this one looks more foraged than florally arranged, which is the highest compliment in boho. The bold red blooms keep it from disappearing into all that green. Paired with a lace sleeve, it’s the full free-spirit package.
See Kyler and Andrew’s St. Louis Wedding →
White and Peach Bouquet with Pinecones

Pinecones tucked into a bouquet is the kind of detail that sounds odd and looks great, adding a woodsy, cold-weather note to the white and peach blooms. Thistles bring a little edge. It’s a winter elopement bouquet that doesn’t lean on the usual evergreen-and-berry routine.
See Polly and Jordan’s Paris Elopement →
Pampas and Eucalyptus Bouquet with White Roses

Pampas grass and eucalyptus framing a handful of white roses is close to the platonic ideal of a beach-boho bouquet. Airy, pale, and a little windswept, it doesn’t fight the ocean behind it. An easy one to hand a florist who’s nervous about going too wild.
See Chloe and Ben’s Miami Beach Elopement →
Peach Rose and Eucalyptus Bouquet

Peach and orange roses with a lot of trailing eucalyptus is the gateway boho bouquet, the one that eases you in without scaring the traditional half of your family. The light ribbon and loose shape do the heavy lifting. Spring brides, this is your lane.
See this Springtime Rustic Boho Shoot →
Peach Rose and Powder Blue Bouquet

Peach roses against powder blue is a softer, prettier palette than most boho bouquets go for, and it works because the filler flowers keep it loose instead of prim. Close up, you can see how many small blooms are packed in. Romantic without tipping into princess.
See Nora and Mason’s Tree Farm Wedding →
Pink Rose Bouquet with Billy Balls

The little white spherical flowers are craspedia, and they add a playful, slightly offbeat punctuation to the pink roses and eucalyptus. The patterned blue ribbon is an unexpected finish that keeps things from getting too matchy. Small details, big personality.
See Jackie and Zach’s Barn Wedding →
Wildflower Bouquet with Coneflowers and Delphinium

This is what an actual wildflower bouquet looks like, not the florist’s polished version of one. Pink coneflowers, purple delphinium, baby’s breath, and thistle, tied off with a lace ribbon. It feels picked from a summer field, which is the whole fantasy.
See Amanda and Casey’s Farm Wedding →
Loose White Bouquet with Ferns

White flowers and ferns arranged loose and organic, paired with a matching flower crown for the full bohemian commitment. The fern is what keeps an all-white bouquet from sliding into bridal-traditional territory. Surprisingly fresh against an industrial rooftop.
See this Industrial Rooftop Styled Shoot →
Wild Bouquet with Branches and Warm Blooms

Branches sticking out of a bouquet is a bold move, and this one fully commits, with orange, red, and white blooms scattered through a deliberately messy arrangement. It’s the least controlled bouquet on this list, in the best way. For the bride who wants it to look like she grabbed it off a hillside.
See this Vintage Boho Beach Shoot →
Red and White Bouquet with Eucalyptus

Red and white can read very classic Christmas, so the trick here is the eucalyptus, piled on heavy and left to spill where it wants. That single choice drags the whole thing from formal to fall-in-the-mountains. Proof that greenery is doing more work than you give it credit for.
See Callie and Tyler’s Smoky Mountains Wedding →
Pink Rose Bouquet with a Leafy Crown

Pink garden roses with loose, trailing foliage, worn alongside a leafy crown that ties the bridal look together. The greenery is left long and undone so the bouquet reads boho rather than ballroom. A safe entry point if your roses are non-negotiable but you still want the relaxed feel.
See Stephanie and Leon’s Plantation Wedding →
Peach Rose Bouquet with Autumn Greenery

Peach roses and a lot of eucalyptus, photographed against a moody autumn background that makes the soft colors pop. It’s a simple recipe, roses plus greenery, but the looseness and the trailing stems are what earn it the boho label. Easy to recreate, hard to mess up.
See this London Bridal Portrait Shoot →
Sola Wood and Succulent Bouquet

A compact bouquet of pale succulents and sola wood flowers, which means it will outlast the marriage license and never wilt in the heat. The muted blush and sage palette pairs with a delicate flower crown for a soft woodland look. Good for an outdoor summer day when fresh blooms would flag by noon.
See Emily and Nathaniel’s Retreat Wedding →
Lace-Wrapped Garden Rose Bouquet

Pink garden roses, baby’s breath, and a pop of yellow billy balls, with the stems wrapped in lace for a soft rustic finish. It’s a more compact, gathered shape than the wild ones above, which suits a bride who wants boho touches without the sprawl. The lace wrap is an easy DIY upgrade.
See this Bohemian Couples Session →
Purple Bouquet with a Protea Bloom

A protea-style bloom buried in purple and white flowers, held loose and low against a lace bell-sleeve dress. The bell sleeves and the unstructured bouquet are speaking the same language. This is boho styling working as a head-to-toe look, not just a flower choice.
See Abigail and Nathan’s Elopement →
White Anemone and Ranunculus Bouquet

White anemones, ranunculus, and roses sound like a traditional combination, and they would be, if they weren’t packed in this loose and paired with this much wandering greenery. The dark centers of the anemones give an all-white bouquet some needed contrast. Clean, but never stiff.
See April and Christopher’s Toledo Wedding →
Small White Dahlia and Snapdragon Bouquet

Not every boho bouquet has to be enormous. This smaller one keeps to white dahlias, roses, and snapdragons with a little eucalyptus, which suits a barn wedding where you’ll be carrying it around all night. Proof that scaling down doesn’t mean giving up the loose, gathered feel.
See Sara and Josh’s Barn Wedding →
Dusty Mauve Bouquets with Scabiosa Pods

A row of these in dusty mauve and blush makes the case for matching your bridesmaid bouquets to the dresses without being literal about it. Roses, berries, and scabiosa pods in muted tones, soft against the silky rose-gold and pink gowns. The texture is what keeps the palette from going sleepy.
See this Ethereal Garden Wedding →
Soft White and Greenery Bouquet

White flowers and green leaves, kept simple and a little loose. It’s the most pared-down bouquet here, the one for a bride who wants the relaxed shape without committing to pampas or protea. Sometimes restraint is the whole look.
See Victoria and Dylan’s Lodge Wedding →
Baby’s Breath Bridesmaid Bouquets

Small clutches of baby’s breath are the budget-friendly boho move that still photographs beautifully in a row. Cheap by the stem, airy in the hand, and a clean match for relaxed lace bridesmaid dresses. The kind of detail that looks intentional, not economical.
See Courtney and Drew’s Wedding →
Loose Ivory Bouquet for a Wine-Country Boho Wedding

A soft ivory bouquet held loose and low, set against the wine barrels and white floral garland of a Temecula backyard celebration with an Argentinian twist. The pale palette keeps the focus on shape and movement rather than color. Easy inspiration if you want boho that still reads classic and warm-weather.
See Alex and Kamen’s Temecula Wedding →
Lavender and Purple Rose Bouquet

Built to match a real lavender field, this bouquet leans all the way into purple, with lavender sprigs and soft purple roses tucked through trailing greenery. It’s a monochrome approach that feels dreamy rather than themed, especially against a lace open-back gown. Proof that committing to one color can look more intentional than a mixed palette.
See this Lavender Field Styled Shoot →
FAQs
What makes a wedding bouquet “boho”?
Boho is about shape and texture more than any single flower. The arrangement is loose and a little asymmetrical, the greenery is left long and trailing, and the mix usually includes something unexpected: pampas grass, dried elements, protea, thistle, or seed pods. If it looks gathered rather than perfectly arranged, you’re in boho territory.
What flowers work best in a boho bouquet?
Pampas grass, protea, eucalyptus, thistle, ferns, and trailing amaranth are the workhorses, often built around roses or ranunculus for softness. Dried flowers and grasses are everywhere in boho because they hold up all day and skew neutral. The goal is a range of textures, not a tidy color match.
Are dried flower bouquets a good idea?
They’re one of the smartest boho choices going. Dried pampas, grasses, and seed pods won’t wilt in the heat, they photograph feathery and full, and you can keep the whole bouquet on a shelf for years afterward. They also tend to cost less than a bouquet of all fresh premium blooms.
How big should a boho bouquet be?
Bigger and looser than a traditional posy, generally, since the trailing greenery and grasses need room to spill. That said, a smaller gathered clutch reads just as boho and is far easier to carry through a long day. Match the scale to your frame and how long you’ll be holding it.
How do I describe a boho bouquet to my florist?
Bring photos, name the specific textures you want (pampas, protea, trailing greenery), and use the word “loose” and “asymmetrical” early so they don’t default to a round shape. Tell them your palette and one or two must-have elements, then give them room to build. The undone look is harder to fake than it appears, so a florist who gets it is worth booking.
