Berry Boutonnieres
Photo: Aaron Delesie
Eucalyptus and tallow berries united on these groomsmen's lapels.
Lavender sprigs accented these groomsmen's suit jackets.
As a tribute to this groom’s stint in Alaska, feathers from the state bird, the ptarmigan, surrounded a sprig of nigella.
A sprig of lily of the valley and a faux gold leaf gave this groom’s lapels a special touch.
Small clusters of gomphrena and spray roses adorned the menswear.
This groom trimmed his lapel with small bundles of viburnum berries, raspberries, ferns, and millet, tied with ribbon for a woodsy look.
This boutonniere features lambs' ear and scabiosa tied with pink velvet ribbons and pinned to lapels for a modern look with plenty of depth.
The lapel of this groom's suit was gussied up with a mint-green succulent and silvery brunia wrapped in pale pink ribbon, which pulled in the shades of his floral bow tie by Tux and Tulle.
A dahlia boutonniere and a cheery polka-dot tie offset a groomsman's khaki suit at a celebration in Tennessee.
A boutonniere can stand only so many hugs. All that love -- plus heat and lack of water -- can leave flowers wilted. Ask your florist to make two boutonnieres for the groom -- one for the ceremony and one for pictures. Some florists will provide the extra one at no cost.
Lustrous, unique flower-bead lapel decorations for the groom and groomsmen can be made well ahead of time -- and will also make a lovely memento of the day.
At this California wedding, the groom wears a cymbidium orchid boutonniere.
The medallion shape, pleated and flattened, evokes the pageantry of parade bunting and the pride of winning first prize.
Boutonnieres crafted from colorful tissue or crepe paper are graceful, inexpensive to make, and always in season.
Nowhere is it written that a boutonniere -- the traditional adornment worn on the lapels of tuxedos and suits -- has to be a flower; a few lovely leaves wrapped in ribbon can be just as dignified.
Boutonnieres and corsages are stylishly clad in silver-gray ribbons: The bride's mother wore orchids that matched the maid of honor's bouquet, and the groom, his sons, and ushers wore dendrobiums.
Decorate groomsmen's lapels with fresh and fabric boutonnieres -- tailored to an autumn affair. Pick one design or mix and match. The leaves are made of handsome textiles, including felt, wool-suiting fabric, and corduroy; the patterns mimic the veins of real leaves. Fiddleheads and sprigs of oregano, fresh lilac, rosemary, and grasses lend contrasting color. Make leaves ahead; add flora on the wedding day.
Boutonnieres made of ribbon have endless design potential (and, unlike real blooms, are always in season). Create them for your groomsmen with ribbon that matches the bridesmaids' dresses or the ribbons around their bouquets. Give them a masculine feel by using a striped, plaid, or checked pattern. Ours are crafted of 1-inch-wide grosgrain.
Boutonnieres are a special way to welcome guests to the wedding: Place a bowl filled with the florets of hyacinth, narcissus, or another fragrant flower on a table, along with a card, beautifully calligraphed, inviting guests to take one as they enter the ceremony or reception. Set a tumbler of glass-headed pins alongside the blooms.
The groom and groomsmen will have a special keepsake if they wear these everlasting beaded boutonnieres. You will need vintage or new beaded leaves and pearlescent floral pips, along with floral tape and green double-sided seam binding. The pips come four or five to a bunch. Cluster three or four sets of pips together with three leaves; wrap them with floral tape. Then wrap them again in the seam binding. Affix to lapels using straight pins.
For this California wedding, boutonnieres made of pink nerines are tied with silk ribbon. Each is pinned to a knot of Mizuhiki cord, created using a Japanesse knotting technique believed to bring the recipient good luck.
Clockwise, from upper right: A green-ribbon-wrapped rose and bud; a sprig of chaste snowberries; three scented tuberose blossoms and buds; two green acorns and stephanotis, their stems twisted together in striped ribbon; the organdy-like petals of ranunculus bound in baby blue; a single fragile spray of lily of the valley on its own green leaf, doubly bowed; one fresh gardenia on its own gleaming leaves.
At this New Jersey wedding, the bride made a beaded boutonniere for her groom to wear -- and keep as a memento.
A simple clematis bloom, tied with satin ribbon, is the boutonniere for the best man at this California wedding.
A debonair alternative to a boutonniere for the groom or men in the wedding party is a neatly folded pocket square. It's a particularly nice choice for a suit or morning jacket worn at a daytime event.
Welcome everyone to the festivities with cheerful boutonnieres. Hardy, inexpensive Mokara orchids pluck cleanly from their stalks and are long-lasting; we embellished each with taffeta ribbon. About 20 minutes before the ceremony, have your florist or wedding coordinator set them on trays near the entrance along with glass-head pins and a sign inviting people to take one.
At this wedding in Jamaica, the groom's boutonniere is a tiny Swarovski crystal frog on a lily pad of miniature orchids.
The bride's own collection of old fabrics helped inspire the details of this outdoor wedding. The bride made the groom's lighthearted tie; his boutonniere of oak leaves and acorns is tied with a jaunty bow.
A boutonniere combines orchids and lamb's ear at an outdoor wedding in Connecticut.
At this Virginia wedding, the groom wore a red leather poppy boutonniere.
Resting on scalloped tags, boutonnieres were laid out in a moss-lined basket for the groom, two of his groomsmen, and his father and grandfather. The adornments for the groom and best man were distinguished by golden bittersweet -- the clusters also combine blackberries, fuzzy bunny tails, and variegated dogwood, all tied with apricot-colored ribbon.
Fabric flowers make a pretty, wilt-proof way for guests to find their seats and then sport as corsages or boutonnieres. Simply use floral tape to attach a brooch pin to the stem of a fabric flower (these are from Dulken and Derrick). Have a calligrapher pen names onto strips of card stock, then punch small holes on one end and slip pins through.
Boutonnieres of nerines with hypericum berries and miniature cymbidium orchids with jasmine vine by florist Matthew Robbins rest in small silver dishes.
The bride's bouquet has green ranunculus, Dutch roses, and sophisticated varieties of carnations; the carnations are the sole bloom in the bridesmaid arrangement. In both, the stems are bound with satin-and-organdy ribbon. A corsage with cryptanthus foliage looks lovely pinned to a pink leather clutch (by Lauren Merkin). For the men, santini mums and a single leaf are tied with felt rickrack.
Pink hyacinth blooms wired into a circle.
Calligraphed quilling paper and flowering stems of heather in a velvet-ribbon band.
Ajania, a type of chrysanthemum, bears a plaid ribbon bow.
Felt flowers and dusty-miller leaves wrapped in double-face satin ribbon.
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Lovely and very creative! I especially liked the folded fabric piece.
I was a little disappointed that there weren't more boutonnieres out of the botanical spectrum. For instance for our wedding, I found small, flat wooden guitars at a craft store, painted and hot glued a pin to the back of each of them. My groom and his groomsmen loved them because they all played guitars and had been in bands with each other at some point or another.
The Boutonnieres that were made of fabric in circles were the worst boutonnieres i haave ever seen. They are terrible with no thought to them at all to make them better,