Wedding style in Singapore is moving away from short-lived fresh arrangements toward blooms that are everlasting, boho and sustainable. Here are the flower trends shaping 2026 weddings — and how to recreate each with wholesale preserved, dried and faux flowers. Planning from scratch? Start with our complete DIY wedding flowers guide.

Trend 1: Dried & boho
Pampas, bunny tails, cotton and grasses continue to define the boho and rustic look — warm, textural and completely everlasting. Browse the range in dried flowers.
Trend 2: Everlasting preserved keepsakes
Brides increasingly want a bouquet they can keep. Preserved blooms last 1–3 years, turning your florals into a lasting memento. See the case for it in preserved vs fresh wedding flowers, and shop preserved flowers.

Trend 3: Sustainable & sola
Eco-conscious couples are choosing sola wood flowers — biodegradable, renewable and dyeable to any palette — and reusable faux. More on sola in the sustainable, biodegradable alternative. The same thinking is reshaping workplaces too — see sustainable corporate flowers.
Trend 4: Bold colour & texture mixing
2026 is less matchy: mixed textures, tonal palettes and pops of unexpected colour. Combining faux flowers with dried and preserved makes this easy and affordable.
How to get the look
Pick your trend, then build it yourself at wholesale prices. Browse the wholesale wedding flowers range, or WhatsApp +65 9183 8193 for help styling your palette.
Frequently asked questions
What are the wedding flower trends for 2026?
Dried and boho textures, everlasting preserved keepsakes, sustainable sola and reusable faux, and bold tonal colour mixing.
Are dried flowers in style for weddings?
Yes — dried pampas, grasses and textural blooms remain central to boho and rustic wedding styling, and they last indefinitely.
What is the most sustainable wedding flower?
Sola wood flowers are biodegradable and renewable; reusable faux and long-lasting preserved flowers also reduce waste compared with fresh.
Can I mix dried, preserved and faux flowers?
Absolutely — mixing all three is a 2026 trend in itself and a cost-effective way to get a full, textured look.