A focused selection of rose varieties, designed around the color directions shaping wedding floristry, this cycle – sienna and cream, lavender and ivory, and white with mauve. The palettes driving wedding design in 2026 share a common quality: they lean into restrained palettes. Fewer colors are used, centering more attention on how similar tones interact and build variation within the same composition.
The Starting Point – Rose Selection
Rosaprima has created three palettes for this season, each based on specific rose varieties chosen for how they work together in arrangements. The selection looks at how the roses sit next to each other in real use, how their tones interact once grouped, and how the overall mix holds together in a finished design. Take a closer look at their three wedding color palettes to use this season!
Sienna and Cream
Neutrals at different depths, sienna anchoring the arrangement, cream providing lift above it. The combination builds movement and provides structure while suiting garden ceremonies and intimate reception spaces where florals are expected to lean more towards characteristics such as organic and considered.
Rose RP Moab, a Rosaprima worldwide exclusive, is the tonal foundation of this palette. It presents a sienna tone that deepens toward the center as the flower opens, with a large, densely petaled form that provides visual weight and presence. RP Moab is one of the very few varieties in this tonal range that offers this combination of depth and opening behavior.
On the other hand, Rose Fancy Dreams completes the pairing. Its gradual transition from soft peach to cream introduces lightness alongside RP Moab’s depth, giving the palette its full tonal range across a single arrangement.
Lavender and Ivory
A palette where restraint is the design strategy. Lavender and ivory together read as deliberate and refined, and in 2026, the market is returning to this direction with a cooler, less pastel-forward interpretation that suits estate settings and evening formats where florals are meant to feel like part of the architecture.
Rose Moon River, one of the Ecuadorian brand's newest additions, provides the lavender base. Its tone is consistent and clean, with a large bud and long vase life that make it a reliable anchor for the cooler end of the palette.
Rose Leonora brings the cream dimension. A David Austin garden rose, she carries the full-petaled density and cream tone that define the wedding rose category, and in this palette, it provides the warmth and openness that Rose Moon River’s cooler register needs to feel complete.
White, Ivory, and Mauve
This is a special palette built to give continuity. White and ivory-grounded arrangements with mauve tones perform great across ceremony and reception formats, in natural daylight and under warm indoor light.
Rose Playa Blanca provides the white foundation. Characterized by being clean and structured in form, it holds presence in the arrangement. Additionally, Rose Quicksand introduces the ivory and muted blush middle register, functioning as the transitional tone that keeps the palette unified.
Don't forget about Rose Razzmatazz, one of their newest additions, which closes the palette with a mauve accent. Its earth-toned mauve coloring and extra-large bud create the visual layering that gives the composition its sophistication, anchoring the arrangement without disrupting the softness of the white and ivory base.
For florists and planners working through the 2026 wedding season, these combinations by Rosaprima provide a considered starting point for incorporating these varieties into your designs.
Photos courtesy of Rosaprima