There’s one thing couples often overlook when planning a wedding: the florist’s relationship with flowers. How they see them. What they believe a flower can do. The five wedding florists on this list don’t treat flowers as decoration. For them, each bloom has a character, each arrangement a point of view. From a loose seasonal bouquet grown on a Nova Scotia flower farm to a bold sculptural installation inside a Vancouver hotel — these are some of the most distinctive wedding florists in Canada. Their arrangements have a way of stopping people mid-sentence.

Neroli by Chloe is one of those Toronto studios that operates quietly and intentionally. She starts from the feeling, then the flowers. The aesthetic draws on Modern Ikebana, garden style, and fine art, producing arrangements where every stem earns its place. Seasonal, nature-inspired, never decorative for decoration’s sake. For couples who approach their wedding with the same eye they’d bring to any design project, Neroli tends to be the name they come back with. The boutique floral design practice takes on a limited number of weddings per season — which means every couple gets the studio’s full attention.

Bri Lovie came to floristry through sculpture and plant science, and that dual background shapes everything about how Lovie & Sons Flower Co. works. Based in Nova Scotia, Bri approaches each arrangement through material, form, and spatial awareness, building compositions where structure and softness exist side by side. The work is architectural, atmospheric, defined by restraint. Across weddings and large-scale events, she treats each project as a shared design process. Her work is defined by clarity, texture, and a quiet confidence in form.

Photo: Courtesy of Lovie & Sons Flower Co

Tucked into Gastown, Vancouver, Kado Flower Studios is the work of a team that puts the same energy into a single bouquet as a full installation. Drawing on Ikebana philosophy — harmony, simplicity, seasonality, and symbolism — the studio treats flowers as a way of connecting people to something beyond aesthetics. Color is used boldly. Compositions are architectural. For weddings, Kado designs everything from single bouquets to full on-site installations, with no celebration considered too small. One of the most inventive wedding florists working out of British Columbia right now.

Photo: Courtesy of Kado Flower Studios

La Bomba Floristry‘s founder Marta Sanderson likes to turn flowers upside down. Inside out, too, if the arrangement calls for it. Founded in 2018, the studio now operates across two Vancouver locations, including a space inside the Fairmont Pacific Rim. La Bomba approaches wedding floristry as art direction: bold color, meticulous detail, a refusal to treat any arrangement as conventional. No two weddings look alike. For couples who want their florals to be genuinely talked about, this is the studio.

Photo: Courtesy of La Bomba Floristry

Rosalie Laporte founded Studio Byrose on one principle: every design starts from scratch. Based in Montreal, the studio creates fully custom floral work for weddings, events, and large-scale indoor and outdoor installations. Rosalie works closely with each client to understand the vision and the meaning behind the occasion. The aesthetic is refined, the approach deeply personal. Whether she’s designing a single bouquet or a sweeping outdoor installation, the principle holds: build the florals around the moment, not the other way around.

Photo: Courtesy of Studio Byrose

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