Shades of Pink
Photo: Elisabeth Millay Photography
While each of these attendant's bouquets was unique, all of them featured pops of dark and light pinks to match their mauve gowns.
These ladies carried small bouquets of dahlias, umbrella ferns, geranium foliage, caramel Antike garden roses, ranunculus, thistle, sea grass, and plum foliage.
This bride's five bridesmaids carried smaller variations of the bridal bouquet that consisted of roses, ranunculus, scabiosa, dusty miller, seeded eucalyptus, and brunia berries.
These bridesmaids carried bouquets of white Darwin tulips tied with white silk grosgrain ribbons.
These bridesmaid bouquets featured lush pink blooms tied off with an ombre organza ribbon.
The bridesmaids at this Bali wedding carried bouquets of mauve 'Cool Water' roses, lilac snapdragons, purple hydrangeas, and green dendrobium orchids with white 'Celesta' aster and 'Xanadu' foliage accents.
These silver tussy-mussy bouquet holders are accented with peonies, and later served as mementos of the occasion.
The ladies at this Charleston, South Carolina wedding carried petite posies of garden roses, trachelium, lisianthus, and dusty miller.
At this couple's nuptials in Maine, each bridesmaid carried a dense cluster of privet berries, hydrangea, ranunculus, scabiosa, and oregano, along with a few wild blooms from the region.
Bridesmaids carried hydrangeas, dahlias, garden roses, lisianthus, trailing clematis, and lamb's ears. The soft hues reflected followed the couple's color palette.
These bridesmaids' clutches were composed of pink and yellow roses and sweetpeas.
Just like their dresses, each of these 'maids clutches were also unique. Though they were created with the same elements (hydrangeas, roses, stock, cotton, lavender, and variegated pittisporum leaves), the amounts varied in each bouquet.
Each bridesmaid in this wedding carried a bouquet of 'Leonidas' roses, bittersweet, and dahlias, with herb accents.
This bride's ’maids all carried dahlias, hydrangeas, and eucalyptus leaves at the couple's farmhouse wedding.
These bridesmaids walked down the aisle to the song "Here Comes the Sun" and held bouquets of roses and berries.
Instead of bouquets, this bride collected books for each of her bridesmaids. Assisted by her mother and a friend, she decorated them with flowers and ribbon handles.
These attendants each carried a bundle of ranunculus, garden roses, and peonies, a smaller version of the bride’s bouquet.
The bridesmaids in this wedding carried chocolate cosmos, scabiosa, dusty miller, roses, and millet.
‘Green Wizard’ rudbeckia, craspedia, and hypericum berries, mixed with sunny hydrangeas, cymbidium orchids, and roses give the bridesmaids’ bouquets a woodland vibe.
The bridesmaids carried bouquets of 'High and Fantasy' roses, brunia, freesia, seeded eucalyptus, and pepperberries.
Hydrangeas, zinnias, and dahlias were used to create these unique bunches for the wedding party.
The attendants at this wedding carried small bouquets of hydrangea, garden roses, and smoke bush.
Each bridesmaid in this wedding carried a bouquet of seeded eucalyptus and one element from the bride's mixed bouquet. Here, cotton balls on the stem take center stage.
Large amaryllis blooms, wired into clusters with a collar of gray dusty miller, made up the bridesmaids' nosegays at this real wedding.
These bridesmaid bouquets were made using Sahara roses, thistle, blue muscari, seeded eucalyptus, spray roses, and dusty miller.
Organic Peruvian lilies were tied with grosgrain ribbon for these bridesmaids' bouquets.
These bridesmaids carried pink and peach garden roses.
Just a few lush 'Coral Charm' peonies and hosta leaves created lovely bridesmaid bouquets at this couple's wedding.
The bridesmaids' bouquets included dahlias, spray roses, dusty miller, gray brunia berries, white hydrangea, and peegee hydrangea.
In contrast to the bride's soft pink bouquet, this maid of honor carried a batch of bright magenta peonies.
These bouquets include white flowers with accents of green tied with black-and-white-striped ribbon to carry through the wedding's color palette.
A bridesmaid holds a white posy against her pink 3.1 Phillip Lim dress at this couple's Bermuda wedding.
Instead of traditional flowers, attendants at this dawn wedding carried glowing lanterns.
This craft-loving bride treated her bridesmaids to a flower arranging class the day before the wedding. The girls learned how to make bouquets, and each made her own in punchy magenta to carry in the wedding. Later, the bouquets served double-duty as decor during the cocktail hour, placed in glass vessels, with a calligraphed tag for each bridesmaid attached.
Each of this bride's nine bridesmaids carried a bouquet of tulips, gardenia foliage, rosemary, ranunculus, freesia, and oregano tied in orange ribbon.
Each of these ladies carried a clutch of porcelain flowers and hand-cut fabric leaves.
White and green flowers created a modern and rustic bouquet for the maid of honor to carry.
Each bridesmaid carried a bouquet of Dutch parrot tulips and white peonies in a collar of hosta foliage. More colorful blooms were used to accent the rich chocolate tone of the women's dresses.
In lieu of bouquets, each of Minhee's bridesmaids carried a custom-made satin handbags by Lauren Merkin with a prom-worthy white carnation corsage and striped ribbon pinned to the front.
Each bridesmaid in this wedding carried a sentimental token: lockets containing photos of loved ones. Their bouquets were made up of garden roses, delphinium, hellebore, sweet peas, ranunculus, and veronica.
The bridesmaids carried these peony and rose bouquets, smaller, slightly varied versions of the bride's.
For this wedding in British Columbia, 'maids carried bouquets of ranunculus, tulips, pine sprigs, and small pine cones. The stems were wrapped in grosgrain ribbon with an overlay of brown sequin trim.
These bridesmaids carried vibrant purple orchids for this destination wedding in the Caribbean.
The maid of honor at this wedding carried a vibrant bouquet tied with a striped ribbon.
These bridesmaids' bouquets were created from a collection of lush leaves in varying shades of green and different textures, all grown in the Caribbean; the composition includes galax, papyrus, and areca palm leaves; the stems are tied with raffia.
Bridesmaids' nosegays of fir, wild pine, cedar, aspen twigs, and berries were swathed in houndstooth wool.
Peonies, roses, brunia, and ornithogalum in the matron of honor's bouquet referenced the bride's without duplicating it.
Bridesmaids' bouquets of creamy roses and dusty miller were wrapped with fabric from their silk dupioni dresses.
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