Liliharp Flowers is proud to grow specialty cut and heirloom blooms in a slow and all natural way, patiently nurturing plants from seed to flower without the use of pesticides or chemicals.

All floral designs are created with seasonality in mind

because we grow 98% of what we use in our designs or source from other small, local flower farms if the need arises.

Which means our ingredient list is dictated by and comprised of only what is currently growing in the fields during the time of your order or event.

So, though we miss peonies in the summer and wish dahlias grew all year long, you’ll only find those special blooms included when they’re naturally occurring in our Virginia climate.

We use this approach because

it’s an eco-friendly, sustainable floristry model that allows us to have a tiny carbon footprint

AND…

Seasonal, garden fresh flowers offer a level of all natural, effortless beauty that can’t be matched through imports.

Curvy stems + free flowing forms are welcomed and embraced at Liliharp Flowers, as we never force the flowers to be anything that what they choose to be in the fields.

Below is a sampling of what you may expect throughout the growing season

(and we encourage you to follow @liliharpflowers on Instagram to have the most updated availability and scroll through a year of flowers.)

Early Spring

(March & April)

tulips, narcissus, flowering branches (forsythia, cherry, dogwood), fritillaria, snowdrops, hellebore, anemone, ranunculus

Late Spring

(May and June)

poppies, campanula, larkspur, snapdragons, forget me nots, dara, queen anne’s lace, orlaya, scabiosa, nigella, peonies, bachelor’s button, columbine, delphinium, agrostemma, bupleurum, yarrow, phlox, foxglove, bee balm

Summer

(late June-August)

zinnias, cosmos, celosia, gomphrena, strawflower, sunflowers, snow on the mountain, nicotiana, lisianthus, amaranth

Autumn

(September and October)

everything list in summer plus dahlias (the queen of fall), marigolds, and heirloom chrysanthemums to end the season on a high note

Winter

(December-February)

evergreens, grasses, and dried florals