Flower names have been given to baby girls for as long as people have been naming babies.
And the reason is simple. Flowers are beautiful. They bloom and they fade and they come back again. They smell like specific memories. They grow in the most unlikely places. There is not a better thing to name a person after.
But there is a whole world of floral names beyond Rose and Lily and Violet. Names from wildflowers and climbing plants and old botanical traditions that sound extraordinary on a baby girl and even better on a grown woman. Names that most parents have never even thought of.
Here are 93 of them.
The Classics Done Right
Rose. Lily. Violet. Daisy.
Everyone knows these names and there is a reason for that. They are genuinely beautiful. They have been working for centuries and they will keep working long after every trend has come and gone.
If you love a classic floral name there is absolutely no reason to look further. A well chosen classic beats an unusual name every single time.
- Rose
- Lily
- Violet
- Daisy
- Iris
- Poppy
- Ivy
- Flora
- Fleur
- Blossom
Wildflower Names That Feel Completely Fresh
Wildflowers have a different energy from garden flowers.
They are not planted. They are not arranged. They just appear in hedgerows and meadows and along roadsides in a way that feels completely free. And the names that come from that tradition carry the same quality. Natural without trying. Beautiful without being precious.
- Briar
- Clover
- Thistle
- Foxglove
- Bryony
- Sorrel
- Tansy
- Yarrow
- Eglantine — the wild rose of medieval poetry, climbing and free
- Columbine — meaning dove, a wildflower with centuries of literary history
- Larkspur
- Meadowsweet
- Woadwaxen
- Teasel
- Vetch
Garden Flower Names Beyond the Obvious
If you love flower names but want something less expected than the top ten, this is where to look.
These are the names from proper old English gardens. The kind of garden with a wall around it and things growing that most people cannot name on sight. Beautiful and specific and genuinely original on a baby girl right now.
- Wisteria
- Camellia
- Clematis
- Verbena
- Zinnia
- Amaryllis
- Delphinium
- Hollyhock
- Lupin
- Peony
- Dahlia
- Aster
- Cosmos
- Phlox
- Salvia
- Nigella
- Aquilegia
- Alstroemeria
- Freesia
- Celosia
Tree Blossom Names
Some of the most beautiful flowers in the world grow on trees.
Cherry blossom. Apple blossom. Hawthorn in May. The names that come from flowering trees carry that same quality of something extraordinary that happens for a short time and makes everything around it feel different while it does.
- Blossom
- Cherry
- Hawthorn
- Acacia
- Mimosa
- Magnolia
- Jacaranda
- Cassia
- Redbud
- Catalpa
Flower Names From Other Languages
English is not the only language that has given flowers to babies as names.
French and Italian and Spanish and Japanese flower names carry a completely different sound from English ones. The same concept, the same beauty, but filtered through a different language and a different tradition. And on an English speaking baby right now they feel genuinely original.
- Soleil — French for sunflower and sun, warm and luminous
- Fleur — French for flower, simple and completely lovely
- Marguerite — French for daisy, long and elegant
- Violette — French form of Violet, softer and more unusual
- Camille — French, connected to the camomile flower
- Fiore — Italian for flower
- Fiorella — Italian diminutive, meaning little flower
- Primavera — Italian for spring, the season of flowers
- Sakura — Japanese for cherry blossom
- Hana — Japanese for flower
- Hanako — Japanese, meaning flower child
- Sumire — Japanese for violet
- Hinagiku — Japanese for daisy
- Ayame — Japanese for iris
- Nadira — Arabic, meaning rare flower
Herb and Botanical Names With Floral Qualities
Not every botanical name is a straightforward flower name.
Herbs and plants and botanical terms that carry a softness and a beauty that sits right alongside the classic flower names. These are the names that feel floral without being obviously so. The ones that make people think for a moment before they realize why the name feels the way it does.
- Sage
- Rosemary
- Lavender
- Saffron
- Rue
- Myrtle
- Fern
- Juniper
- Calla
- Calyx — the outer part of a flower, original and beautiful as a name
- Petal
- Brier
- Frond
- Tendril
- Garland
The Final Eight
- Elowen. Cornish for elm tree, which is not a flower but carries the same quiet botanical beauty. Soft, ancient, almost completely unused. For a daughter who will grow slowly and stand for a long time.
- Hyacinth. The flower and the myth behind it both. A boy loved by Apollo, turned into a flower after his death. The name is bold and beautiful and carries real history inside it.
- Amaryllis. From the Greek pastoral poets who used it for their most beautiful heroines. Long and musical and genuinely extraordinary on a baby girl today.
- Eglantine. The wild rose of medieval poetry. Climbing and free and found everywhere in old English verse. Completely original as a name right now and one of the most beautiful sounds on this entire list.
- Wisteria. The climbing flower that turns entire walls purple in May. Long and soft and impossible to forget. Nobody else will have it.
- Camellia. Warm and elegant. Cami as a nickname makes it immediately accessible. The full name carries something quietly extraordinary.
- Columbine. Meaning dove. A wildflower with a long literary history and one of the most underused beautiful names in English. Original without being strange.
- Nigella. From the botanical name Nigella damascena, the love-in-a-mist flower. Unusual and soft and completely lovely. The kind of name people hear once and immediately wish they had thought of first.
Wrapping It Up
Flower names work because they connect your daughter to something real and beautiful and lasting.
Flowers come back every year. They outlast everything around them. They grow in places nobody expected them to. All of that is in the name before your daughter has done a single thing to earn it.
Go through the ones that felt right. Say them out loud. Some of these names are completely different when spoken than when read and you need to hear them to know if they are yours.
The right one will bloom when you find it.