A softly layered editorial wedding flower design in seasonal tonesEditorial Wedding Floral Design at Château de Villette, near Paris
This editorial wedding floral design at Château de Villette explores a softer, more atmospheric approach to wedding flowers. Set in a historic château near Paris, the floral work was shaped by light, season and conversation, creating an environment that felt calm, intimate and quietly expressive rather than styled.
Pastel hydrangeas, airy cosmos and blush lisianthus came together in a low, cloud-like table runner that moved gently through the space. I wanted the flowers to feel present without ever becoming dominant, allowing conversation, gestures and shared moments to flow naturally across the table. The composition remained deliberately open and breathable, creating a continuous garden atmosphere rather than a traditional centrepiece arrangement.
Flowers and foliage were approached as a single material, layered with restraint and guided by their natural movement. The palette stayed soft and muted, rooted in the season and shaped by texture rather than contrast. Subtle shifts in tone and density allowed the arrangements to catch the light differently throughout the day, giving the tables a quiet depth that revealed itself gradually rather than all at once.
All floral elements were created using a foam-free approach, relying exclusively on natural floral mechanics and seasonal flowers. This way of working is integral to my practice. It allows the design to remain honest, low-impact and closely connected to its environment. Sustainability here is not a visual statement, but a foundation that supports both the aesthetic and the longevity of the work.
If you’re drawn to editorial wedding flowers that feel garden-led, seasonal and quietly elegant, we would love to imagine a floral landscape shaped around your celebration.