Showing 1–8 of 25 results
Assorted Mini Potted Succulents
2-inch nursery pots, real live succulents, and enough variety to make even your most overachieving aunt pause for a photo — these Assorted Mini Potted Succulents aren’t just charming, they’re the type of favor guests will low-key brag about taking home. Each tiny plant arrives pre-potted and ready to mingle with your tablescape, no green thumbs or last-minute assembly parties required. They’re grown in California, so yes, they’ve probably had better weather than most of the guest list.
The best part? These aren’t identical cut-and-paste plants. You get a mix — echeverias, sedums, crassulas — all doing their own low-maintenance thing. That means your guests don’t walk away with a clone army of the same exact succulent. Instead, they leave with something personal, something living, and something that won’t pass out in the backseat before the reception’s over. Line them up like a little plant parade on your escort card table, or pop one at each place setting for instant “we planned this” energy.
In a sea of wedding favors nobody asked for or remembers, these tiny, spiky wonders hit the sweet spot: minimalist enough for a modern bash, earthy enough for a boho setup, and unkillable enough for your cousin who once murdered a spider plant. Everyone wins.
Crochet Tropical Leaf Planter
Each pot is crocheted by hand with tropical leaf detailing — think monstera vibes with none of the watering guilt. There’s no soil, no spike, no mysterious shrinkage during transport. Just soft yarn, bright green fronds, and a tiny planter that looks suspiciously like something your cool cousin would make if she had “a little side business on Etsy.”
It’s a plant. It’s not a plant. It’s whatever your guests want it to be — an office desk mascot, a bookshelf pick-me-up, or the one favor that doesn’t require sunlight, shelf-stable humidity, or the will to keep something alive post-reception. The miniature size makes it ideal for place settings (and suitcases), and the lack of watering schedule means even your most commitment-averse friend can enjoy it without killing anything. Win-win.
Let’s be honest: most favors get forgotten at the table, or worse, re-gifted to someone’s dog walker. These? They’re just quirky enough to be memorable, just cute enough to spark a “wait, are these… crochet?!” moment, and just practical enough to survive that long trip home in someone’s carry-on. No gardening skills required — just a soft spot for the unexpected.
Dried Rose Glass Tube
A preserved rose sealed in a cork-topped glass tube feels a bit like sending your guests home with a Victorian love letter—without the emotional labor. This dried bloom doesn’t just sit pretty; it’s suspended like a botanical time capsule, offering a moment of quiet drama among the escort cards and craft cocktails.
At a wedding where succulents and seed packets reign supreme, this one’s the wildcard: delicate, intentional, and clearly not an afterthought. It doesn’t need water, sun, or even space—a rare triple threat for a favor. The minimalist cylinder (read: test tube chic) holds the rose in place like it’s part of a curated apothecary, not plucked from a clearance bin. Bonus: the personalization on the label means you can mark the moment without stamping your initials on everything your guests touch.
If your vibe leans more moody romance than rustic garden, this favor slots in without the faintest whiff of burlap. It says “thanks for coming” with equal parts mystery and style—like a tiny floral secret they’ll actually want to keep. Not bad for something that fits in a clutch.
Handcrafted Crochet Flower Trio
Three tiny crocheted blooms — one sunflower, one forget-me-not, one very committed succulent — all stitched by hand and unapologetically unkillable. They arrive bundled together in miniature pots that look like they could’ve been part of your dollhouse flower shop. But unlike your childhood décor, these won’t fade, need watering, or mysteriously attract fruit flies.
This handcrafted crochet flower trio is the favor equivalent of a slow wink: sweet, memorable, and just a little unexpected. Guests will think, “Oh, how cute,” then turn the pot in their hands and go, “Wait, this is *yarn*?” It’s the kind of favor that doesn’t pretend to be a real plant, doesn’t *want* to be a real plant — and that’s the charm. No dirt. No drought anxiety. Just tactile, intentional whimsy that won’t crash and burn in a guest’s hot car like those poor orphaned succulents you saw at your cousin’s wedding.
Perfect for spring weddings, garden-party themes, or anyone whose vibe is more “cottagecore with a side of serotonin.” Whether placed at each guest’s setting or corralled in a terrarium-style display, these little blooms hold their own — no green thumb required. Ideal for people who love plants but kill all their succulents (everyone, basically).
Handmade Phalaenopsis Orchid Soap
Each petal is hand-poured soap, shaped to mimic the curve and color of a real Phalaenopsis orchid — right down to the gentle blush at the center. This isn’t “vaguely flower-shaped.” It’s botanical cosplay, and it’s nailing the assignment. Made with a vegan-friendly glycerin base, this tiny bloom quietly one-ups every hotel mini soap you’ve ever met.
It’s the kind of detail guests notice: a favor that looks like a delicate flower but turns out to be an actually useful object. The kind that doesn’t melt in a hot car or require a watering can. Bonus — it won’t die in two weeks (brutal, but true of many wedding flora). And since each bar comes individually wrapped, you can plop them onto place settings or stack them in a basket without a single DIY meltdown.
Ideal for garden party weddings, eco-elegant themes, or anyone trying to avoid the usual jam-jar favor trap. This orchid soap is thoughtful without being fussy. A keepsake that doubles as a skincare upgrade, minus the synthetic scent assault. Your guests will think: “Wait, is this a real flower?” before they realize it’s a bar of soap that smells better than half their bathroom shelf. A rare win in the world of favor table roulette.
Handmade Stained Glass Sunflower Pot
Hand-cut stained glass petals. Not painted, not printed—actual glass, shaped and soldered into a sunflower that stays perky long after summer fades. It’s a miniature piece of window-worthy art, just… in a pot. Which, yes, makes this technically a plant favor—but it’s one that will never ask your guests for sunlight, water, or emotional availability.
The maker uses the copper foil method (a little Tiffany-era technique for the stained glass nerds among us), which means every sunflower is just imperfect enough to be obviously handmade. Set in a neutral mini pot that won’t upstage the glasswork, this favor is ideal for weddings that lean artsy, folksy, or “we craft our own kombucha” chic. It walks the line between kitsch and craftsmanship in the best possible way. Your great-aunt will call it cute. Your college roommate will ask where you found it. Nobody will leave it behind.
And unlike actual sunflowers—which, let’s face it, have a brief window of dazzle before becoming sad, oversized dandelions—this one still beams even when forgotten on a bookshelf. Guests take it home thinking it’s a favor, realize it’s a tiny stained glass sculpture, and get a little braggy about it. Win-win.
Let Love Grow Pine Seedling
Each seedling comes wrapped in kraft paper, tied with twine, and tagged with a softly smug “Let Love Grow.” It’s giving forest chic with a side of eco-credit. This isn’t just a symbolic gesture—it’s a literal tree in the making. A future pine, discreetly waiting to root itself into your guests’ yards, pots, or sense of quiet responsibility.
No plastic shell, no mystery instructions, no gimmick. What you see is what your guests plant: an unfussy evergreen nestled in soil and rustic wrapping that plays nicely with any wedding vibe leaning woodland, minimalist, or vaguely Pinterest planned. It won’t melt in the car, shed petals by dessert, or get left behind with the crumpled reception programs. And in a few years? That tiny pine could be holiday-décor tall. You can’t say that about a mini jam jar.
Best of all, it’s a favor with a timeline. Months from now, when someone’s Googling “how to transplant pine seedling,” they’ll remember your perfectly offbeat wedding and the tiny tree you trusted them to raise. That’s legacy. Well, that and the dance floor footage. Probably both.
Mini Colorful Succulents
Three-inch succulents in candy-colored rosettes, packed tight like a botanical bento box — this set is pure serotonin in soil form. Each one is nestled in its own tiny planter, ready for the grab-and-go moment your guests will replay with quiet glee when they unpack it at home. The hues range from soft greens to dusty mauves — nature’s version of a coordinated color palette, without the Pinterest stress headache.
They’re small enough to double as your table décor and your favors (read: fewer things to coordinate, more time to drink champagne). And since they’re real plants, not just weirdly realistic plastic, they bring that “minimal effort, maximum charm” vibe we all secretly want out of wedding details. Bonus: they won’t die mid-reception like those cut flowers you spent half a budget on.
In short: these mini succulents are low-maintenance, photogenic, and the plant equivalent of “cool without trying.” Your guests will 100% take them, no polite sign required.
