Summer wedding bouquet trends 2026 in Sedalia and Pettis County are leaning hard into sculptural asymmetry, citrus color palettes, draping amaranthus, single-stem statement florals, and heat-tolerant Missouri-grown blooms — with average bridal bouquet prices running $250 to $450 for mid-range, $450 to $750 for premium, and $750 to $1,200 for the sculptural statement pieces walking out our door this June, July, and August. The classic round, all-white posy is not dead, but it is no longer what most 2026 Sedalia brides are ordering.
If you are getting married in Pettis County between Memorial Day and Labor Day, you are also working with real Missouri summer weather. July averages 87 to 92 degrees with 65 to 75 percent humidity, and outdoor venues like Bothwell Lodge State Park, the Pettis County Fairgrounds, and the small vineyard weddings popping up around Sedalia all expose flowers to direct sun, wind, and heat stress. Trend selection has to survive the day, not just the photo. This guide walks through the eight bouquet trends Sedalia brides are actually ordering for summer 2026, what each one costs, which Missouri venues each style works best at, and how to keep them looking lush from the first-look photos through the last dance.
What Are the Trending Wedding Flowers for Summer 2026?
The trending wedding flowers for summer 2026 fall into two camps: structural focal blooms and soft draping textures. On the structural side, calla lilies, anthurium, garden roses, and dahlias are dominating bridal bouquets. On the draping side, amaranthus (love-lies-bleeding), trailing jasmine, and italian ruscus are showing up in nearly every consultation we book. Pantone has pushed transformative tea — a soft, dusty botanical green — as the 2026 color of the year, but Sedalia brides are pairing it with citrus brights (lemon, tangerine, persimmon) far more than the muted pastels we saw in 2024 and 2025.
The big shape change for 2026: asymmetry. Tightly rounded round bouquets are still appropriate for traditional ceremonies, but the bouquet most often photographed and most often requested at Sedalia consultations is now an off-center, sculptural shape with one dominant focal cluster and a long sweep of trailing material. Below are the eight specific trends driving 2026 summer wedding bouquet orders in Pettis County — ranked from most-requested to bonus styling.
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1. Sculptural Asymmetrical Bouquets — The Defining 2026 Shape
Sculptural asymmetrical bouquets are the single most-requested 2026 trend at our Sedalia shop, accounting for roughly 40 percent of summer bridal bouquet orders this season. Inspired by mid-century modern floral design and the gestural ikebana revival on Pinterest and TikTok, an asymmetrical bridal bouquet abandons the rounded silhouette entirely. One side carries a dense focal cluster (typically garden roses, dahlias, or peonies in May-June); the opposite side trails 18 to 30 inches of amaranthus, jasmine vine, or smilax.
- Cost in Sedalia: $385 to $725 (mid-range $385 to $525, premium $525 to $725)
- Best for: outdoor garden weddings, vineyard ceremonies around Pettis County, modern downtown Sedalia venues like the Liberty Center stage
- Photo placement: held to one hip rather than centered at the waist — this is the photo styling change that goes with the shape change
- Heat tolerance: medium-high if built on garden roses and dahlias rather than soft peonies
- Skip if: you have a very traditional ceremony, very short stature, or a very fitted column gown that the trailing material competes with visually
Pro Tip
A real test: hold the bouquet at your hip, not your belly button. If the trailing element drags on the ground or pulls the bouquet sideways out of your grip, the shape is too long for your height. We typically scale the trail to 1/3 of your torso length for proportional photos.
2. Citrus Color Palette — Lemon, Tangerine & Persimmon
The citrus color palette is the 2026 summer trend that surprised us most, because it directly displaced the dusty mauve and terracotta palette that dominated 2023 through 2025 Sedalia weddings. About 28 percent of our 2026 summer bookings have requested some version of lemon yellow, tangerine, or persimmon as the dominant or accent palette. The look is bright, sunny, and intentionally a little retro — think Slim Aarons poolside photography and 1970s citrus orchards.
Citrus palettes also happen to photograph beautifully against the green of a Missouri summer landscape, which is why outdoor Pettis County weddings are leaning into them. The base build is yellow garden roses or yellow dahlias, with persimmon zinnias or orange ranunculus as secondary focals, and small accents of literal citrus fruit (lemons, kumquats, dried orange slices) tucked into the design or used as table marker accents.
- Cost in Sedalia: $295 to $565 (slightly less than equivalent white-and-blush bouquets because yellow garden roses are abundant in summer)
- Best for: outdoor June-August weddings, vineyard receptions, brunch weddings, anything with green grass or stone walls in the backdrop
- Photo placement: works at any waist height; the bright color carries the photo even when the shape is conventional
- Heat tolerance: high — yellow dahlias, zinnias, and marigolds are all heat-loving Missouri-grown blooms
- Skip if: your gown is ivory or champagne (the warm tones can clash) — this palette wants a true white, soft cream, or even a colorful gown
3. Amaranthus Draping — Love-Lies-Bleeding as the Star
Amaranthus, also called love-lies-bleeding, is the breakout supporting flower of 2026. It is the rope-like, draping burgundy or chartreuse bloom that pours out of asymmetrical bouquets and ceremony arches. Five years ago, amaranthus was a niche specialty product flown in for high-end weddings. In 2026 it is grown by multiple Missouri cut-flower farms — including operations within an hour of Sedalia — which has cut the price roughly in half and made it accessible to mid-range bridal bouquets.
We are using amaranthus three ways in 2026 Sedalia bouquets: as a deep-burgundy trailing element in moody black-and-bright designs, as a chartreuse drape in citrus palettes, and as a pure textural anchor in white-and-green minimalist bouquets. It moves in the wind, photographs gorgeously, and does not wilt on a hot day the way trailing greenery sometimes does.
- Cost in Sedalia: adds $45 to $95 to a base bouquet build for the amaranthus alone (most 2026 designs include 4 to 8 trailing strands)
- Best for: outdoor weddings with breeze, photography-heavy weddings, asymmetrical designs
- Photo placement: hold higher than you think — the trail extends visually below the held position
- Heat tolerance: high — amaranthus actually thrives in 90-degree heat
- Skip if: your venue has narrow doorways or tight aisles where the trail will catch on chairs or columns
Pro Tip
If you are walking through Bothwell Lodge State Park on a windy June afternoon, ask your florist to wire two or three of the longest amaranthus strands. Wired strands hold their gestural shape; unwired strands flop in 15 mph wind. We typically wire 30 percent of the trail and leave 70 percent natural for the best balance of structure and movement.
4. Single-Stem Statement Bouquets — Calla Lilies & Anthurium
Single-stem statement bouquets are the minimalist counterpoint to the maximalist sculptural trend, and Sedalia brides who want a modern, architectural look are choosing them at a notable rate for 2026 — about 12 percent of summer orders. The build is exactly what it sounds like: one to three premium statement stems, wrapped tightly with ribbon, no filler.
The two flowers driving this trend are calla lilies (the elegant, trumpet-shaped bloom that has been a wedding staple for decades but is having a serious 2026 moment) and anthurium (the heart-shaped, glossy tropical bloom that reads either retro-1970s or ultra-modern depending on color choice). Both hold up exceptionally well in Missouri summer heat — better than nearly any other wedding flower we work with — which is part of why brides booking outdoor July and August dates are gravitating toward them.
- Cost in Sedalia: $185 to $325 for a 1-to-3 stem calla lily bouquet, $245 to $425 for an anthurium build
- Best for: modern minimalist brides, tall brides with column gowns, courthouse weddings, very high-heat outdoor July weddings
- Photo placement: held vertically along the body or low at the hip — this style does not work held belly-button-front
- Heat tolerance: extremely high — calla lilies and anthurium both have waxy, water-storing structures that resist wilting
- Skip if: you want a soft, romantic, garden-style look — this trend is architectural, not lush
5. Heat-Tolerant Blooms — Missouri Summer Reality Check
Trend or not, if you are getting married outdoors in Pettis County between June 15 and September 5, your bouquet has to survive 87-to-92-degree afternoons and 70-percent humidity. This is the single biggest practical filter we apply to every summer Sedalia bouquet design. Some 2026-trending flowers are heat-loving champions; others wilt in 30 minutes of direct Missouri sun. Knowing which is which matters more than knowing which is on Pinterest.
Below is the heat-tolerance ranking we actually use when designing bouquets for outdoor June, July, and August Sedalia weddings, scored on a 1-to-10 scale based on how the flower performs from the first-look (typically 2 PM) through the reception toast (typically 7 PM) at a 90-degree outdoor venue.
| Flower | Heat Tolerance (1-10) | Behavior at 90°F + Humidity | Sedalia Cost per Stem (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zinnia | 10 | Thrives — actually opens more in heat | $2.50 to $4.00 |
| Celosia | 10 | Color holds, no wilt, dries beautifully | $3.50 to $5.50 |
| Sunflower | 9 | Heads stay upright if hydrated, no petal drop | $3.00 to $5.00 |
| Calla lily | 9 | Waxy structure resists wilt for 8+ hours | $8.00 to $14.00 |
| Anthurium | 9 | Glossy, water-storing, near-bulletproof | $10.00 to $18.00 |
| Amaranthus | 9 | Trail stays graceful, no head droop | $6.00 to $12.00 per stem |
| Dahlia | 8 | Holds well if cut morning-of and conditioned | $5.00 to $9.00 |
| Lisianthus | 8 | Reliable summer workhorse, soft rose alternative | $4.50 to $7.50 |
| Garden rose | 7 | Drops outer petals slightly but holds shape | $8.00 to $15.00 |
| Snapdragon | 6 | Florets hold, but tip can curl in direct sun | $3.50 to $5.50 |
| Hydrangea | 4 | Wilts within 60 minutes without hydration packs | $8.00 to $12.00 per head |
| Peony (out of season) | 2 | Imported July-August peonies fail fast in Missouri heat | $15.00 to $24.00 |
What this table actually means for your bouquet build: if your ceremony is outdoors and the date is in July or August, weight your bouquet at least 60 percent toward the 9-and-10 score flowers. Save the 7-and-8 score flowers (garden roses, dahlias, lisianthus) for the focal cluster where they will photograph the strongest and where small petal drop is forgivable. Ask your florist about hydration packs (small water tubes hidden in the bouquet base) for any 4-to-6 score flowers — these can extend hold time by 3 to 4 hours.
Heat-Tolerant Bouquet Build for a Sedalia July Wedding
- Focal cluster (40%): 5 to 7 garden roses or dahlias — drama and recognizability
- Secondary blooms (30%): zinnias, lisianthus, celosia in palette colors — heat workhorses
- Architectural accent (15%): 1 to 2 calla lilies or anthurium — bulletproof structure
- Trailing element (15%): amaranthus and italian ruscus — movement and depth
- Hold time goal: 6+ hours from morning prep through last reception photo
6. Wildflower Deconstructed — Garden Picking, Polished
The wildflower deconstructed bouquet is what Sedalia brides ask for when they want their bouquet to look like they walked through a Missouri prairie and gathered an armful 20 minutes before the ceremony — except executed with the proportional precision that distinguishes a designer bouquet from a literal yard-pick. About 14 percent of our 2026 summer brides are choosing this style.
The look pairs sophisticated focal flowers (white garden roses, soft pink dahlias, cream lisianthus) with genuinely wild-feeling supporting elements: queen anne's lace, scabiosa, cosmos, native grasses, even seeded eucalyptus and trailing wild clematis. Stems are deliberately uneven lengths, the binding is loose and visible, and the silhouette is intentionally imperfect — but the color story and proportional balance are tightly controlled.
- Cost in Sedalia: $325 to $585
- Best for: barn weddings, vineyard ceremonies, prairie-edge venues, outdoor private-property tent weddings
- Photo placement: held loosely with stems visible — the visible binding is part of the aesthetic
- Heat tolerance: medium — depends heavily on whether queen anne's lace and cosmos make it into the build (both wilt fast)
- Skip if: you have a formal ballroom reception or a structured suit-style wedding party where the loose silhouette will look mismatched
Pro Tip
Genuine wildflower-looking bouquets often need flowers from at least two or three different Missouri growers. We start sourcing wildflower-style bouquets four to six weeks before the wedding date instead of the typical two weeks, because we are coordinating with small Pettis County and Johnson County farms for specific stem availability. Build that lead time into your timeline.
7. Garden-Rose-Forward — David Austin & English Garden Style
Garden-rose-forward bouquets remain the most photographed and Pinterest-saved style on our 2026 summer Sedalia consultation list, even as sculptural and citrus trends grow. Roughly 22 percent of our 2026 summer bookings are leading with garden roses as the primary focal flower. The David Austin varieties — Juliet, Patience, Keira, Beatrice — and the o'Hara cream-and-blush spray varieties continue to dominate.
What is new for 2026 is how garden roses are being styled. Last year's tightly composed all-garden-rose bouquet has loosened into a more open, breathing arrangement with visible negative space, mixed with summer-grown supporting flowers (lisianthus, scabiosa, ranunculus while still in season through late June). The all-pink and all-blush builds of recent years have given way to mixed warm tones — peach, butter yellow, coral, soft caramel — within a single bouquet.
- Cost in Sedalia: $425 to $785 (garden roses are the most expensive single bloom in most summer bouquets)
- Best for: classic-romantic brides, indoor receptions, June weddings before peak heat
- Photo placement: classic — held at the waist front, slightly tilted forward for the camera
- Heat tolerance: medium-high (7 out of 10) — outer petals may drop but the bouquet holds shape
- Skip if: budget is the primary driver — garden roses run $8 to $15 per stem and a 14-stem bouquet stems alone is $140
8. Black + Bright — Chocolate Cosmos with Citrus
The black-and-bright bouquet is the most fashion-forward 2026 trend on this list and represents about 4 percent of our summer Sedalia orders — small in volume but disproportionately requested by brides with strong personal style and editorial tastes. The look pairs deep burgundy chocolate cosmos (which actually smell faintly of chocolate and vanilla), black-burgundy dahlias, and merlot lisianthus with bright citrus accents (tangerine ranunculus, persimmon zinnias, yellow craspedia balls).
It is high contrast, photographs dramatically, and reads modern in a way that softer palettes do not. The pairing has been showing up on editorial wedding shoots since late 2025, and we have started seeing it filter into actual Sedalia bookings for fall-edge summer weddings (mid to late August, when the moodier color story starts to feel right).
- Cost in Sedalia: $485 to $825 — chocolate cosmos are a specialty stem at $4 to $7 each
- Best for: late-summer weddings (mid-August through Labor Day), fashion-forward brides, dark gowns or non-white attire, modern reception venues
- Photo placement: any — high contrast carries any held position
- Heat tolerance: medium-high — most flowers in this build are summer-tolerant
- Skip if: your venue is heavily traditional or your photographer leans light-and-airy — this palette wants a moody editorial photographer
Bonus: Ribbon Trends for 2026 Summer Bouquets
The trailing ribbon attached to the base of a bouquet is no longer an afterthought — for 2026 it is part of the design statement. The trend has moved decisively away from synthetic satin ribbons (which photograph plasticky and crease in heat) toward natural, hand-finished alternatives. Three options are dominating Sedalia bouquet orders this summer:
- Silk velvet ribbon — soft, drapes beautifully, photographs as a luxurious matte texture; most popular for moody and garden-rose builds; adds $25 to $45 per bouquet
- Hand-dyed silk ribbon — naturally variegated color, often dyed with plant-based colors; popular for citrus, terracotta, and earthy palettes; adds $35 to $65 per bouquet
- Vintage ribbon and salvaged trim — sourced from estate-sale linens or vintage textile shops; popular for wildflower deconstructed and old-money aesthetic builds; adds $45 to $95 per bouquet
- Length: 24 to 36 inches of trail is the 2026 standard, longer than the 12 to 18 inches that was typical in 2023
- Color: tonal to the bouquet, not contrasting — match the dominant focal cluster, not the palette accent
Pettis County Summer Climate: What Your Bouquet Has to Survive
Sedalia and Pettis County summer wedding weather is not subtle. According to NOAA Climate Data Online, the Sedalia Memorial Airport station logs an average July high of 89.4°F with average relative humidity around 70 percent. Late afternoon thunderstorms are statistically most likely between 4 PM and 7 PM, which is exactly when most outdoor ceremonies take place. The Bothwell Lodge State Park grounds, the Pettis County Fairgrounds, and the small but growing number of vineyard wedding venues around Pilot Grove and La Monte all expose flowers to direct afternoon sun with limited shade.
What this means for trend selection: the sculptural asymmetrical, citrus, calla-lily, and amaranthus trends are all heat-friendly and will hold beautifully through a 90-degree afternoon. The garden-rose-forward and wildflower deconstructed trends need design adjustments (hydration packs, conditioning the night before, working with proven heat-tolerant supporting flowers) to survive the day. And imported peonies, hydrangeas, and any soft tropical flowers should be reserved for indoor venues or April-through-mid-June dates only.
Pro Tip
If you are getting married outdoors at Bothwell Lodge State Park (one of the most popular Sedalia-area outdoor venues) between July 1 and August 31, request a 9 AM bouquet pickup or delivery and store it in a cool, dark room with the stems in fresh water until 30 minutes before the ceremony. We have seen well-built summer bouquets last 8 to 10 hours when handled this way; the same bouquet sitting in a hot car for 4 hours pre-ceremony will be visibly tired before you walk down the aisle.
What Blooms Travel from Local Missouri Growers vs. Get Shipped
Where your flowers come from in summer 2026 matters more than ever for both quality and budget. Sedalia is fortunate to sit within delivery range of multiple Missouri cut-flower farms, including operations in Pettis, Johnson, Cooper, and Saline counties. Locally-grown stems travel less than 24 hours from field to your bouquet, which translates directly into longer vase life on a hot wedding day. Here is what is reliably grown within an hour of Sedalia in summer 2026 versus what we have to ship in:
- Locally grown (within 1 hour of Sedalia, June-August): zinnias, dahlias, sunflowers, lisianthus, celosia, snapdragon, amaranthus, scabiosa, cosmos, marigolds, queen anne's lace, basil flowers, mountain mint, italian ruscus, dusty miller
- Shipped from California, Oregon, or imported (any month): garden roses, calla lilies, anthurium, ranunculus (after early June), most premium greenery (smilax, jasmine vine), eucalyptus varieties beyond seeded
- Available locally for short windows only: peonies (Missouri local: late May through second week of June only — outside that window everything is imported and significantly more expensive)
- Cost difference: locally grown is typically 25 to 40 percent less per stem than shipped equivalent, with significantly better hold time on hot wedding days
Are Round Bridal Bouquets Still in Style in 2026?
Round bridal bouquets are still in style in 2026, but they are no longer the default. About 25 percent of our 2026 summer Sedalia consultations are choosing a traditional round silhouette, down from 60 to 70 percent five years ago. The asymmetrical sculptural shape has captured the largest share, with single-stem statement, wildflower deconstructed, and garden-style builds dividing the rest.
When a round bouquet still makes sense in 2026: very traditional ceremonies (Catholic Mass at Sacred Heart, formal Presbyterian services), petite brides where a long trailing element overwhelms the gown, and column or sheath gown silhouettes where a compact bouquet visually grounds the look. The round bouquet of 2026 is also itself slightly evolved — looser, with garden roses or peonies rather than tight rosebud builds, and with visible greenery breaking up the perfect circle.
What Is the Wedding Flower of the Year for 2026?
There is no single official wedding flower of the year — Pantone names a color, not a bloom — but the flower industry consensus crowns the dahlia as the unofficial 2026 flower of the year, with the calla lily a close second. Dahlias offer the size, color range, and architectural form that fits both the sculptural-asymmetrical and citrus trends. Calla lilies anchor the single-stem statement trend and survive Missouri summer heat better than nearly any other premium bloom.
Specifically for Sedalia summer weddings: cafe au lait dahlias (the soft, putty-pink dinnerplate variety) and labyrinth dahlias (yellow with red-tipped petals) are the two most-requested specific dahlia cultivars at our shop right now. If you want them, book at least 12 weeks ahead — our dahlia growers harvest specific cultivars in limited quantities and the popular ones sell out fast for peak weekends.
How Much Does a 2026 Trending Bridal Bouquet Cost in Sedalia?
A 2026 trending bridal bouquet in Sedalia costs $250 to $1,200 depending on style, flower selection, and size. The price tiers below reflect what real Pettis County brides are paying for the eight trends covered in this guide — these are 2026 pricing numbers from our active wedding order book, not stale industry averages.
| Tier | Price Range | Typical Build | Best Match Trends |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-range | $250 to $450 | 14-18 stems, locally-grown focus, simple ribbon | Citrus palette, wildflower deconstructed, single-stem calla lily |
| Premium | $450 to $750 | 20-28 stems, mixed local + shipped, silk velvet ribbon | Sculptural asymmetrical, garden-rose-forward, amaranthus draping |
| Statement | $750 to $1,200 | 30+ stems, premium imported focals, hand-dyed silk ribbon, wired structure | Full sculptural with 30-inch trail, black-and-bright editorial, statement anthurium |
Where most Sedalia 2026 summer brides actually land: roughly 35 percent in mid-range, 50 percent in premium, and 15 percent in statement. The premium tier covers the vast majority of the trending styles in this guide because the sculptural-asymmetrical, garden-rose-forward, and citrus-with-amaranthus builds all need the stem count and material breadth that the premium tier funds. For a deeper look at how the bouquet fits into your full wedding flower budget, see our breakdown of what wedding flowers cost in Sedalia, MO for 2026.
Trend Pairings That Work for Sedalia Summer Venues
Not every trend works equally well at every Pettis County venue. Here is how we typically match the 2026 summer trends to specific Sedalia and Pettis County wedding settings:
- Bothwell Lodge State Park (outdoor stone): sculptural asymmetrical with amaranthus, citrus palette, wildflower deconstructed — the natural setting wants organic shapes
- Pettis County Fairgrounds (open large pavilion): garden-rose-forward, citrus palette with bright color carry — the volume of the space wants visible color
- Liberty Center for the Performing Arts (downtown theater): black-and-bright editorial, sculptural asymmetrical with dramatic trail, single-stem calla lily — the architecture wants bold gestures
- Heritage Hall at Sedalia Convention Center (warm wood interior): garden-rose-forward, amaranthus draping in deep tones, mixed warm citrus — the warmth of the room wants warm flower tones
- Local vineyard ceremonies (Pilot Grove, La Monte): wildflower deconstructed, citrus palette, garden-rose-forward — the agricultural setting wants natural-feeling builds
- Sacred Heart Catholic Church: classic round, garden-rose-forward, single-stem calla lily — formal ceremony wants more conservative shapes
If your venue is not on this list, our complete Sedalia wedding venue flower guide covers floral planning for SFCC, Liberty Park, the full Missouri State Fairgrounds complex, Hotel Bothwell, and other Pettis County options.
Booking Timeline for a 2026 Trending Sedalia Wedding Bouquet
Trending bouquets — especially those involving specialty flowers like cafe au lait dahlias, chocolate cosmos, anthurium in specific colors, or hand-dyed silk ribbon — need longer lead time than standard bouquet orders. The Knot 2024 Real Weddings Study found that 83 percent of couples book their florist 9 to 12 months out. For 2026 summer trending styles in Sedalia we recommend the same window, with these specific milestones:
- 9 to 12 months out: book your florist, share Pinterest inspiration, get first-pass quote
- 6 months out: lock in trend direction (sculptural vs. round, citrus vs. moody, locally-grown vs. shipped focal)
- 12 weeks out: confirm specific cultivars (specifically cafe au lait dahlia, Juliet garden rose, white anthurium) so growers can plant or reserve
- 8 weeks out: ribbon selection, final color confirm, sample stem walkthrough at the shop
- 4 weeks out: final headcount, final payment, delivery logistics
- 2 weeks out: weather contingency check for outdoor venues
- 48 hours out: final flower count walkthrough, bouquet styling confirmation
Need flowers in Sedalia?
Tell us the occasion, delivery date, and style you have in mind. We'll help choose seasonal flowers that fit your budget.
Final Thought: Trend Smart, Not Trend-Driven
Every trend in this guide is real, photographable, and currently being ordered by 2026 Sedalia brides — but the best summer bouquet is not the most-trending one. It is the one that matches your gown, your venue, your skin tone, your photographer's lighting style, and the realistic constraints of a Missouri July afternoon. We have walked this many Sedalia brides through trend selection: choose the structural element first (sculptural vs. round vs. single-stem), then the palette (citrus, moody, garden, wild), then the supporting players (amaranthus, calla lilies, locally-grown specialty stems), and finally the ribbon. Building in that order keeps you grounded in shape and color rather than chasing every individual flower trend on Pinterest.
For more on bouquet design beyond weddings, our guide to ordering the perfect Sedalia bouquet covers the same principles applied to events, anniversaries, and gift bouquets. To see how summer wedding flowers fit into the broader 2026 Missouri season, our spring flower trends in Missouri piece covers what blooms when, and our Sedalia wedding florals guide covers the full ceremony and reception design beyond the bouquet itself. If your wedding falls during Missouri State Fair week (August 13-23, 2026), our Missouri State Fair flowers guide covers the timing complications that come with Fair Week traffic and demand.
To start a 2026 summer bridal bouquet conversation, call Sedalia Flowers at (660) 206-2500 or stop by the shop. Bring your venue, your wedding date, your gown details, and any inspiration photos — we can usually walk you through trend fit, palette, and a first-pass quote in about 30 minutes. We deliver bridal bouquets and full wedding florals throughout Sedalia, the surrounding Pettis County area, and to nearby towns including Warrensburg, Marshall, and Knob Noster (see our full delivery zone map for nearby towns).




