If there is one naming category I could talk about forever, it is this one.
Cottagecore girl names carry something that is genuinely hard to find anywhere else. They feel soft and rooted and a little bit magical all at the same time. Like a name that belongs to someone who grows her own herbs and knows every wildflower by name and makes everything around her feel more beautiful just by being in it.
I spent a lot of time putting this list together because I wanted it to feel complete. Not just the obvious ones but the ones that are sitting slightly out of reach, waiting for the right parent to find them.
Here are 200 of the prettiest ones.
Names That Feel Like a Wildflower Meadow
I always start here when I think about cottagecore girl names.
Flower and plant names have been part of English naming tradition for over a century but most parents stop at Rose and Lily and Violet. Go one layer deeper and the options get so much more interesting.
These names are rare, beautiful, and connected to the natural world in the most direct way possible.
- Primrose
- Eglantine
- Zinnia
- Wisteria
- Amaryllis
- Camellia
- Hyacinth
- Tansy
- Marigold
- Clover
- Edelweiss
- Yarrow
- Sorrel
- Larkspur
- Briar
- Thistle
- Blossom
- Fern
- Rue
- Eglantine
Tree and Forest Names That Sound Quietly Beautiful
There is something about tree names for girls that I find completely irresistible.
They feel ancient and living at the same time. Rooted in something that has been here long before us and will be here long after. And so many of them are genuinely stunning when you say them out loud.
- Rowan
- Hazel
- Willow
- Birch
- Linden
- Elowen – Cornish meaning “elm tree”
- Sylvia
- Cedar
- Alder
- Laurel
- Ivy
- Briar
- Willa
- Ash
- Elm
- Hawthorn
- Bracken
- Brier
- Oakley
- Forrest
Old Farmhouse Girl Names That Are Ready to Come Back
I genuinely believe these are the most underrated names on this entire list.
They were completely normal a hundred years ago in rural England, in the American countryside, in farmhouses and cottages and small village communities everywhere. Then they quietly stepped back for a generation or two.
And now they are sitting there waiting. Completely untouched. Ready for the right parent to bring them home.
- Winifred – nickname Freddie
- Millicent – nickname Millie
- Sophronia – nickname Sophie
- Eulalia – nickname Eula
- Araminta – nickname Minty
- Mehetabel – nickname Hetty
- Celestine – nickname Cece
- Ottoline – nickname Otty
- Hildegard – nickname Hilda
- Gertrude – nickname Trudy
- Petronilla – nickname Petra
- Etheldreda – nickname Edda
- Ernestine – nickname Ernie
- Hortensia – nickname Hortie
- Mildred – nickname Millie
- Beulah
- Clothilde – nickname Tilda
- Radegund
- Cunigunde – nickname Gundi
- Mechtild – nickname Mecht
Soft and Gentle Cottagecore Names
Not every cottagecore name has to feel earthy and rooted.
Some of the most beautiful names in this space feel light and gentle. The kind of names that belong to someone who moves through the world softly and leaves things more beautiful than she found them.
I love these because they carry warmth without weight.
- Blythe
- Wren
- Fleur
- Lark
- Seren
- Blossom
- Meadow
- Rain
- Mist
- Fae
- Rue
- Dew
- Dove
- Willa
- Nell
- Flora
- Cora
- Della
- Alma
- Pearl
Herb and Kitchen Garden Names
This is the section that feels most specifically, most beautifully cottagecore to me.
A girl named after an herb she might grow in her own garden one day. A name connected to something that smells good and heals and has been used by women for centuries.
I find something genuinely moving about that.
- Sage
- Basil – yes, on a girl, and it is beautiful
- Sorrel
- Yarrow
- Fennel
- Rue
- Tansy
- Clover
- Lavender
- Rosemary
- Thyme
- Juniper
- Bay
- Saffron
- Anise
- Coriander – nickname Cori
- Cardamom – nickname Carda, wildly original
- Marigold
- Vervain
- Wormwood – dark and botanical, completely original
Literary and Poetic Cottagecore Names
Cottagecore has always had a deep connection to literature.
The pastoral poets. The Romantic writers. The authors who went to live in the countryside and wrote about the natural world with genuine reverence. And the female characters from classic literature who felt most at home when they were outside, in the garden, in the fields, in the forest.
These names carry all of that.
- Dorothea – Middlemarch
- Beatrix – Beatrix Potter, who literally lived a cottagecore life
- Cordelia – Shakespeare
- Rosalind – As You Like It, set in the Forest of Arden
- Celia – As You Like It
- Sylvia – carried by Sylvia Plath and connected to the Latin for “forest”
- Araminta – Harriet Tubman’s birth name, extraordinary history
- Isadora – Isadora Duncan danced barefoot in meadows
- Eulalia – early Christian martyr, beautiful name
- Winifred – Welsh saint connected to a holy spring
- Celestine – carried by saints and mystics
- Hildegard – Hildegard von Bingen grew medicinal herbs and composed music
- Melusine – medieval water spirit from French folklore
- Lorelei – German river siren
- Ondine – French water spirit
- Elowen – Cornish elm tree saint
- Endellion – Cornish saint who lived on milk from her deer
- Arianrhod – Welsh meaning “silver wheel”
- Rhiannon – Welsh meaning “great queen,” connected to birds and horses
- Niamh – Irish meaning “bright”
Vintage Nickname Names That Work Beautifully Standalone
Something I find so interesting about cottagecore naming is how the nickname forms from a hundred years ago are often the most beautiful part.
Hettie. Tilly. Bea. Winnie. These were common as nicknames and now they feel fresh and original as standalone names.
- Hettie
- Tilly
- Bea
- Winnie
- Millie
- Edie
- Dotty
- Flossy
- Gussie
- Lettie
- Lottie
- Maisie
- Nettie
- Posie
- Rosamund – nickname Rosie
- Trudy
- Freddie
- Clem
- Minty
- Otty
Bird Names That Feel Purely Cottagecore
Birds are everywhere in cottagecore.
On the wallpaper, on the china, in the hedgerows outside the window. And bird names for girls carry that same light, free, completely natural energy.
- Wren
- Robin
- Lark
- Linnet
- Dove
- Starling
- Finch
- Swallow
- Martin
- Swift
- Teal
- Jay
- Rook
- Bunting
- Pipit
Nature and Landscape Names That Feel Like the Countryside Itself
The English countryside, the Irish hills, the Scottish moorland. Places that feel like they have been here forever and look exactly the way they always have.
These names come from that landscape directly.
- Heath
- Moor
- Glen
- Dale
- Briar
- Fen
- Cove
- Brook
- Vale
- Ridge
- Down
- Holme
- Coombe
- Beck
- Gill
Magical and Folkloric Cottagecore Names
Cottagecore and folklore have always been connected.
Old stories, old beliefs, old names that belonged to the women who knew the names of plants and the properties of roots and lived close enough to the natural world that the line between it and magic felt genuinely thin.
These names carry all of that.
- Elowen
- Endellion
- Arianrhod
- Rhiannon
- Melusine
- Ondine
- Nixie
- Fae
- Lorelei
- Saoirse
- Niamh
- Aoife
- Sorcha
- Hecate
- Circe
- Thessaly
- Ianthe
- Calypso
- Selene
- Nyx
Ten More That Simply Belong on This List
I kept coming back to these. Every single one of them feels completely and perfectly cottagecore and I could not leave any of them out.
- Rosalind
- Celestine
- Primrose
- Eglantine
- Amaryllis
- Wisteria
- Hyacinth
- Eulalia
- Winifred
- Elowen
Wrapping It Up
Two hundred names. Every single one of them carrying that same quiet, rooted, deeply beautiful cottagecore energy.
Some of them are old. Some are rare. Some are waiting to be rediscovered. And some have been sitting on this list your whole life without you realising they were exactly what you were looking for.
Go back through the ones that made you pause.
Say them out loud. Say the nickname if there is one.
I know the right one is in here somewhere. And I think you probably already know which one it is.