Bouquet delivery in Paris: Parisian style, the Rungis market and a seasonal palette
Paris taught the world to treat flowers as part of everyday life. People here pick up a stem or two on the way home on a Friday, not only for a big occasion. That is why demand for bouquets in Paris stays steady all year instead of spiking only around holidays.
This category covers round hand-tied spiral arrangements, loose field-style champêtre gatherings, single-variety mono bouquets and seasonal mixes. It also includes kraft wrapping, matte film and the fully unwrapped, stems-in-hand presentation you see at the street market.
Where the flowers come from
The main flow runs through Rungis, the vast wholesale market just outside Paris with its own flower pavilion. Dutch cuts from the Aalsmeer auction reach it overnight. French growers from the Loire Valley and the south, around Nice and Antibes, add to the selection.
This short chain keeps the time from cut to vase down to two or three days for European stems. For the recipient that means extra days of vase life — usually seven to twelve, depending on the variety.
Which format to choose
Parisian taste leans toward the natural: less symmetry, more air and texture. Here is the breakdown by style.
- Champêtre (field style) — a loose asymmetric build with grasses, ranunculus, anemones and greenery. The everyday city favourite.
- Round spiral — the hand-tied classic with an even dome. Works for a birthday, a thank-you or a professional gesture.
- Mono bouquet — one variety, one colour. Tulips in spring, peonies in June, ranunculus and anemones in winter.
- Pastel and nude — powdery, creamy, smoky tones for the interiors of Le Marais and Saint-Germain.
- Bright mix — deep coral, fuchsia and orange for districts like Belleville and Bastille.
Occasions and seasonality
The demand calendar in Paris has its own rhythm. Saint-Valentin on 14 February peaks in red tones. Fête des Mères in late May calls for soft pastels. On 1 May the city lives by the lily of the valley (muguet), a tradition said to bring luck. Wedding season runs from May to September, when peonies, hydrangeas and garden roses come forward.
For large celebrations we agree on the date in advance: buds such as peonies should open at the right hour, not the morning after.
"A Parisian rarely asks for something ordinary. More often it's 'make it alive, like from the garden' — so the bouquet looks gathered a minute ago in a field, not lined up with a ruler. That's the local style in a nutshell."
— a florist with many years of practice
Delivery specifics in Paris
The climate is mild and oceanic: winters usually +3 to +7 °C, summers around +25 °C, with occasional heat waves above +35 °C. In strong heat we carry bouquets with a hydro-box and cooling inserts; in cold weather, in thermal packaging. Spring and early autumn are the calmest times to transport flowers without extra measures.
Hand-off is flexible: to a hotel concierge, at an office reception in La Défense, or in person in residential quarters. For a hotel delivery, please give the guest's name and booking reference. Prices are in euros (€, EUR).
Care at home
Trim the stems at a 45° angle, remove leaves below the waterline and place them in a clean vase with cool water. Change the water every two days and add flower food. Keep the bouquet away from radiators, direct sun and ripe fruit — ethylene noticeably shortens the life of cut flowers.
We will match the format and palette to your specific need — message the manager and we will help build an arrangement that fits both the occasion and the recipient.