Spring-Inspired Soirees
Spring is full of new growth and fresh beginnings. The season brings an offering of florals with incredible range of movement, texture, and color, allowing floral designs to feel deeply connected to the landscape and time of year. From delicate branching blooms to sculptural spring varieties, the use of spring blooms offers an opportunity to create celebrations that feel layered, intentional, and distinctly personal. Below, we are highlighting several weddings that each approached the season differently, while embracing the natural beauty and character of spring flowers.
Vibrant Varietals
One spring wedding that immediately comes to mind is the celebration of K+S at The Chanler in Newport, Rhode Island. Working closely with the couple and Infinite Events, Stoneblossom designed a floral story centered around bold color, layered movement, and the natural energy of late spring. Taking place in May, the design leaned heavily into blooms that thrive during this time of year, including lilac, allium, tulips, poppies, and bleeding hearts. Rather than arranging the florals uniformly, we approached each installation individually, allowing the palette to transition organically throughout the celebration. Color-blocked arrangements moved through multi-hued tonal shifts across the ceremony and reception spaces. The result was a celebration that felt joyful, immersive, and highly personal to the couple, while still allowing the venue’s coastal atmosphere and intimate scale to remain at the forefront
Photographer: Brooke Nash
Pastel Petals
With spring comes a spectacular assortment of pastel blooms and foliage that are perfect for curating a classic garden-inspired aesthetic. Delicate textures, layered petals, and airy movement create an atmosphere that feels relaxed, romantic, and quietly refined. For L+T’s wedding at Castle Hill Inn in Newport, Rhode Island, Stoneblossom partnered with AMC Events to create a floral design that embraced the softer side of the season. From sweet pea to spirea, we crafted an ethereal design plan that incorporated the best blooms of the season at the heart of the arrangements. We expertly melded pastel blooms to create a symphony of florals that matched the enchanting air of the day.
Photographers: Krista Jean, Stephanie Vegliante, Mist & Moss
Punchy Peonies
For couples looking to make a stronger visual statement, spring peonies offer an incredible amount of presence, scale, and color variation. Their shape alone can shift the feeling of a design, especially when used generously throughout a ceremony or tented reception. M+T’s wedding at Castle Hill Inn embraced that approach fully. Working alongside Infinite Events, Stoneblossom designed a floral plan centered around vibrant shades of coral, peach, yellow, and hot pink, creating an atmosphere that felt energetic, celebratory, and distinctly reflective of the couple. The ceremony and reception tent were intentionally layered with saturated color and abundant floral placement, allowing guests to feel immersed in the design from the moment they arrived. While the palette was bold, careful attention was given to balance, movement, and the natural openness of the oceanfront setting so the florals enhanced the space rather than competing with it.
Photographers: Jamiee Morse, Stephanie Vegliante, Lisa Rigby
Spring Greens
Some of the most compelling spring designs incorporate fresh greens and subtle yellow tones to create a feeling that is crisp, textural, and deeply seasonal.nBlooms such as green viburnum, pon pon ranunculus, and fresh foliage varieties bring movement and dimension into a floral story while maintaining a restrained, organic feel. Even within a more classic white wedding palette, introducing layered spring greens can completely shift the atmosphere of the event, adding depth and softness without overwhelming the overall design. At Stoneblossom, we often find that these quieter seasonal elements are what make a spring wedding feel the most immersive — connected not only to the design itself, but to the landscape, light, and feeling of the season as a whole.
Photographers: Cora Jane, Brooke Nash, Les Loups, Lauren Fair