Late Harvest

$280.00

The last warmth before everything goes quiet. Cream peonies and dried botanicals in the amber light of a season letting go beautifully.

Late Harvest is the richest, most layered arrangement in the collection — and the most autumnal. Ivory and parchment peonies in full bloom rise above a bed of dried pampas, fern fronds, banksia pods and baby's breath, all gathered into a sculptural ribbed ceramic vessel the color of fresh cream. The palette is entirely tonal — ivory, parchment, warm wheat, soft brown — and the effect is deeply warm, deeply still. This is the arrangement for the dining table in October, the entryway that greets you like a sigh. Each flower handcrafted by artisans in Thailand, arranged by hand in Los Angeles.

What's Included

  • Ivory Peony — Fully Open× 3

  • Parchment Peony — Ruffled & Open× 2

  • Cream Tulip Blooms — Closed & Elegant× 2

  • Dried Pampas Grass — Tall & Feathery× 4

  • Dried Fern Fronds — Structured & Architectural× 3

  • Baby's Breath Clusters — Soft Scatter× 3

  • Banksia Pods — Warm Amber Texture× 2

  • Eucalyptus Stems — Muted Green Depth× 3

Create your own late harvest

Late Harvest is the most textural arrangement in the collection — and texture is everything here. The interplay between soft paper petals and the rough, organic quality of dried botanicals is what gives this piece its depth. The key is layering heights dramatically: your tallest pampas stems should reach nearly twice the height of your lowest peony. That vertical range is what makes the arrangement feel like a landscape rather than a bouquet.

"Dried botanicals don't ask to be arranged — they ask to be listened to. Follow their natural lean and the composition finds itself."

01

Choose a Sculptural Vessel

Late Harvest needs a vessel with presence — a ribbed ceramic orb, a fluted urn, or a wide-mouthed stoneware pot in cream or warm white. The vessel is part of the composition, not just a container.

02

Build the Dried Foundation First

Unlike other arrangements, start with your dried elements — pampas, ferns, and banksia pods. Let them establish the height and silhouette. They are the architecture. The flowers come after.

03

Place Peonies in the Middle Layer

Ivory and parchment peonies sit in the middle third of the arrangement — above the vessel but below the tallest dried stems. Vary their heights and angles. Let some face forward, others turn slightly away.

04

Tuck in Tulips & Baby's Breath

Closed tulip blooms add elegant vertical punctuation between the open peonies. Baby's breath scattered throughout softens the transition between the lush flowers and the dry botanicals above — the bridge between two worlds.

05

Finish Low with Eucalyptus

Eucalyptus stems placed low at the vessel's edge ground the arrangement and add a final layer of muted color. Their dusty green against the ivory and parchment tones is the quiet detail that ties everything together.

The last warmth before everything goes quiet. Cream peonies and dried botanicals in the amber light of a season letting go beautifully.

Late Harvest is the richest, most layered arrangement in the collection — and the most autumnal. Ivory and parchment peonies in full bloom rise above a bed of dried pampas, fern fronds, banksia pods and baby's breath, all gathered into a sculptural ribbed ceramic vessel the color of fresh cream. The palette is entirely tonal — ivory, parchment, warm wheat, soft brown — and the effect is deeply warm, deeply still. This is the arrangement for the dining table in October, the entryway that greets you like a sigh. Each flower handcrafted by artisans in Thailand, arranged by hand in Los Angeles.

What's Included

  • Ivory Peony — Fully Open× 3

  • Parchment Peony — Ruffled & Open× 2

  • Cream Tulip Blooms — Closed & Elegant× 2

  • Dried Pampas Grass — Tall & Feathery× 4

  • Dried Fern Fronds — Structured & Architectural× 3

  • Baby's Breath Clusters — Soft Scatter× 3

  • Banksia Pods — Warm Amber Texture× 2

  • Eucalyptus Stems — Muted Green Depth× 3

Create your own late harvest

Late Harvest is the most textural arrangement in the collection — and texture is everything here. The interplay between soft paper petals and the rough, organic quality of dried botanicals is what gives this piece its depth. The key is layering heights dramatically: your tallest pampas stems should reach nearly twice the height of your lowest peony. That vertical range is what makes the arrangement feel like a landscape rather than a bouquet.

"Dried botanicals don't ask to be arranged — they ask to be listened to. Follow their natural lean and the composition finds itself."

01

Choose a Sculptural Vessel

Late Harvest needs a vessel with presence — a ribbed ceramic orb, a fluted urn, or a wide-mouthed stoneware pot in cream or warm white. The vessel is part of the composition, not just a container.

02

Build the Dried Foundation First

Unlike other arrangements, start with your dried elements — pampas, ferns, and banksia pods. Let them establish the height and silhouette. They are the architecture. The flowers come after.

03

Place Peonies in the Middle Layer

Ivory and parchment peonies sit in the middle third of the arrangement — above the vessel but below the tallest dried stems. Vary their heights and angles. Let some face forward, others turn slightly away.

04

Tuck in Tulips & Baby's Breath

Closed tulip blooms add elegant vertical punctuation between the open peonies. Baby's breath scattered throughout softens the transition between the lush flowers and the dry botanicals above — the bridge between two worlds.

05

Finish Low with Eucalyptus

Eucalyptus stems placed low at the vessel's edge ground the arrangement and add a final layer of muted color. Their dusty green against the ivory and parchment tones is the quiet detail that ties everything together.