Cornwall In Bloom Collection
Cornwall in Bloom is inspired by the flowers that grow in, around and alongside Cornwall — from spring daffodils and bluebells to garden favourites that have become part of the landscape over time. These designs reflect the county’s mild climate, acidic soil and long tradition of planting, where cultivated and wild blooms often exist side by side.
Drawing from hedgerows, woodlands, coastal headlands and historic gardens, the collection captures flowers as they are encountered rather than arranged. Some appear alone, others in quiet conversation, their colours softened to sit naturally together across the range.
Rooted in place and season, Cornwall in Bloom celebrates the familiar rhythms of flowering and return — a collection shaped by walks, gardens and the subtle ways Cornwall comes alive each year.
Where Spring Begins
Soft yellow daffodils form the heart of this design, their familiar trumpet shapes opening against a backdrop of early spring greens and scattered companion blooms. Hyacinths and irises weave gently through the composition, creating a layered sense of growth rather than a formal arrangement.
Inspired by Cornwall’s mild climate, where fields of daffodils appear long before spring fully arrives, this print reflects that quiet shift in the season — when colour returns and the landscape begins to stir. Roadsides and farmland come alive with flowers grown for cutting, their presence a sign that winter is loosening its grip.
Where Spring Begins captures that first moment of renewal, when the year turns and everything feels possible again.
On The Headland
This print centres on sea campion, its delicate pale blooms lifted against coastal tones and open space. Sparse and uncluttered, the composition reflects the way these flowers grow — hardy, low and shaped by exposure rather than shelter.
Sea campion is found out on Cornwall’s headlands, thriving where the land meets the wind. Unlike the softer flowers of hedgerows and gardens, it belongs to the open cliffs and salt-laden air, holding its ground through changing weather and long days of light.
On the Headland is a quiet study of resilience — a coastal flower perfectly adapted to its place, growing where it’s least expected, and all the more beautiful for it.
Where The Woods Turn Blue
Bluebells fill this design, their nodding bells scattered through soft greens and shadowed ground. The pattern mirrors the way they appear in nature — not singly arranged, but gathered in drifts that blur into one another as they move through the woodland floor.
In Cornwall, bluebells often feel less like isolated plants and more like a moment in the year. Woodlands, estate grounds and quiet paths briefly change colour, turning cool and blue before returning just as quietly to green.
Where the Woods Turn Blue captures that fleeting transformation — a familiar spring ritual that feels timeless, gentle and almost unreal while it lasts.
Held In Bloom
Full, generous hydrangea heads form the focus of this print, their clustered petals layered in soft blues, whites, pinks and lilacs. The blooms sit close together, creating a sense of abundance and quiet weight, as if the flowers are holding one another in place.
Though not native, hydrangeas have become deeply woven into Cornwall’s gardens and estates, thriving in the acidic soil and mild coastal climate. They often grow large and unrestrained, spilling into paths and borders, their colours shifting with the seasons and the ground beneath them.
Held in Bloom reflects that sense of fullness — of gardens at their richest point, where growth feels contained yet gently overflowing, and summer seems comfortably settled in.
Do Not Forget Me
Small forget-me-not flowers scatter across this design, their pale blue petals and sunny centres creating a light, rhythmic pattern. Delicate and unassuming, they sit low within the composition, just as they do in gardens and along hedgerows.
In Cornwall, forget-me-nots often appear where they are least planned — arriving through garden borders, stone walls and Cornish hedges, carried quietly from place to place. They are flowers discovered rather than planted, noticed only when you pause.
Do Not Forget Me is a gentle reminder of the beauty found in modest details — the blooms that don’t demand attention, but stay with you long after you’ve passed them by.
When Winter Softens
Camellia blooms form the heart of this design, their smooth, sculpted petals unfolding in soft whites, pinks and reds against deep, glossy foliage. There is a calm confidence to them — flowers that arrive early and linger, unfazed by the season around them.
In Cornwall, camellias often bloom while winter still holds on elsewhere. Sheltered gardens and old estates fill with colour long before spring officially arrives, their heavy flowers falling intact to the ground beneath them. They mark the turning of the year quietly, without ceremony.
When Winter Softens captures that moment when the season begins to loosen — when colour returns gently and the promise of spring feels close, even if the air is still cool.
Where Poppies Run To Sea
Bright red poppies move through this design in loose drifts, scattered amongst summer wildflowers that soften the composition. There’s a sense of movement to it — blooms stretching and leaning as if guided by wind and light rather than order.
The print is inspired by the fields above the north coast of Cornwall, particularly around Polly Joke, where poppies flood the headlands each summer. Here, colour feels unstoppable, spilling towards the sea and blurring the line between cultivated land and wild growth.
Where the Poppies Run to Sea captures that joyful excess — a moment of high summer when the landscape feels alive with colour, heat and motion, before everything is carried back into green again.
Between Garden Walls
This design brings together a mix of familiar garden flowers, loosely gathered and layered to create a sense of enclosure and shelter. The composition feels contained rather than wild, with blooms pressing gently against one another as if growing within defined borders.
Inspired by Cornish gardens enclosed by stone walls and hedges, this print reflects spaces shaped over time — places where planting becomes generous, informal and deeply personal. These are gardens tended and returned to, changed season by season but always recognisable.
Between Garden Walls captures the comfort of enclosed spaces — gardens made not for display, but for living within, where growth is guided but never constrained.
Held Against The Wind
Thistles and coastal wildflowers form the basis of this design, their spined stems and small blooms layered together in muted tones. There’s a rawness to the composition, balanced by softness — flowers shaped as much by exposure as by growth.
Along Cornwall’s coast, wildflowers cling to headlands and open ground, growing low and tough against constant wind. Thistles, in particular, thrive in these places, their structure lending both protection and beauty in equal measure.
Held Against the Wind reflects the resilience of plants that grow where conditions are harsh — a quiet tribute to strength, adaptation and the understated beauty of the coast.
Hedgerows To The Sea
This design weaves together gorse, hawthorn and hedgerow flowers in a loose, flowing composition that feels rooted in movement through the landscape. The plants overlap and drift, echoing the way boundaries soften as land opens out towards the coast.
In Cornwall, hedgerows often lead directly to the sea, lined with flowers in spring and early summer. Gorse brightens the paths with colour and scent, while hawthorn marks the shift from enclosed land to open space. These are plants encountered on long walks, carried by memory as much as sight.
Hedgerows to the Sea captures that gradual transition — from sheltered paths to salt air and open horizons — a quiet ending where land and coast meet and the journey feels complete.