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March 1, 2025

Upper Southampton March Floral Selection


The Bloom Central flower delivery of the month for March in Upper Southampton is the Color Crush Dishgarden

March flower delivery item for Upper Southampton

Introducing the delightful Color Crush Dishgarden floral arrangement! This charming creation from Bloom Central will captivate your heart with its vibrant colors and unqiue blooms. Picture a lush garden brought indoors, bursting with life and radiance.

Featuring an array of blooming plants, this dishgarden blossoms with orange kalanchoe, hot pink cyclamen, and yellow kalanchoe to create an impressive display.

The simplicity of this arrangement is its true beauty. It effortlessly combines elegance and playfulness in perfect harmony, making it ideal for any occasion - be it a birthday celebration, thank you or congratulations gift. The versatility of this arrangement knows no bounds!

One cannot help but admire the expert craftsmanship behind this stunning piece. Thoughtfully arranged in a large white woodchip woven handled basket, each plant and bloom has been carefully selected to complement one another flawlessly while maintaining their individual allure.

Looking closely at each element reveals intricate textures that add depth and character to the overall display. Delicate foliage elegantly drapes over sturdy green plants like nature's own masterpiece - blending gracefully together as if choreographed by Mother Earth herself.

But what truly sets the Color Crush Dishgarden apart is its ability to bring nature inside without compromising convenience or maintenance requirements. This hassle-free arrangement requires minimal effort yet delivers maximum impact; even busy moms can enjoy such natural beauty effortlessly!

Imagine waking up every morning greeted by this breathtaking sight - feeling rejuvenated as you inhale its refreshing fragrance filling your living space with pure bliss. Not only does it invigorate your senses but studies have shown that having plants around can improve mood and reduce stress levels too.

With Bloom Central's impeccable reputation for quality flowers, you can rest assured knowing that the Color Crush Dishgarden will exceed all expectations when it comes to longevity as well. These resilient plants are carefully nurtured, ensuring they will continue to bloom and thrive for weeks on end.

So why wait? Bring the joy of a flourishing garden into your life today with the Color Crush Dishgarden! It's an enchanting masterpiece that effortlessly infuses any room with warmth, cheerfulness, and tranquility. Let it be a constant reminder to embrace life's beauty and cherish every moment.

Upper Southampton PA Flowers


We have beautiful floral arrangements and lively green plants that make the perfect gift for an anniversary, birthday, holiday or just to say I'm thinking about you. We can make a flower delivery to anywhere in Upper Southampton PA including hospitals, businesses, private homes, places of worship or public venues. Orders may be placed up to a month in advance or as late 1PM on the delivery date if you've procrastinated just a bit.

Two of our most popular floral arrangements are the Stunning Beauty Bouquet (which includes stargazer lilies, purple lisianthus, purple matsumoto asters, red roses, lavender carnations and red Peruvian lilies) and the Simply Sweet Bouquet (which includes yellow roses, lavender daisy chrysanthemums, pink asiatic lilies and light yellow miniature carnations). Either of these or any of our dozens of other special selections can be ready and delivered by your local Upper Southampton florist today!

Would you prefer to place your flower order in person rather than online? Here are a few Upper Southampton florists to visit:


Cherry Lane Florist
757 Street Rd
Southampton, PA 18966


Deluxe Flowers
258 East Street Rd
Feasterville-Trevose, PA 19053


Domenic Graziano Flowers
60 James Way
Southampton, PA 18966


Fireside Flowers
1040 2nd Street Pike
Richboro, PA 18954


Just Because Flowers
3540 St Rd
Bensalem, PA 19020


LeRoy's Flowers
16 N York Rd
Hatboro, PA 19040


NE Flower Boutique
11702 Bustleton Ave
Philadelphia, PA 19116


Newtown Floral Company
18 Richboro Rd
Newtown, PA 18940


Precious Petals
Huntingdon Valley, PA 19006


Rhodes Newtown Flower & Gift Shop
103 S State St
Newtown, PA 18940


Whether you are looking for casket spray or a floral arrangement to send in remembrance of a lost loved one, our local florist will hand deliver flowers that are befitting the occasion. We deliver flowers to all funeral homes near Upper Southampton PA including:


All Star Memorials
209 Bustleton Pike
Feasterville Trevose, PA 19053


Berschler and Shenberg Funeral Chapels
1111 S Bethlehem Pike
Ambler, PA 19002


Craft Givnish Funeral Home
1801 Old York Rd
Abington, PA 19001


Fluehr Joseph A IV
800 Newtown Richboro Rd
Richboro, PA 18954


Forest Hills Cemetery
101 Byberry Rd
Huntingdon Valley, PA 19006


Forest Hills/Shalom Memorial Park
Byberry & Pine Rds
Huntingdon Valley, PA 19006


Goldsteins Rosenbergs Raphael-Sacks Suburban North
310 2nd Street Pike
Southampton, PA 18966


James J Mcghee Funeral Home
690 Belmont Ave
Southampton, PA 18966


John J Bryers Funeral Home
406 North Easton Rd
Willow Grove, PA 19090


Joseph A Fluehr III Funeral Home
800 Newtown Richboro Rd
Richboro, PA 18954


King David Memorial Park
3594 Bristol Rd
Bensalem, PA 19020


Kirk & Nice Suburan Chapel
333 County Line Rd
Feasterville Trevose, PA 19053


Levine Funeral Home
4737 E Street Rd
Feasterville Trevose, PA 19053


Our Lady of Grace Cemetery
1215 Super Hwy
Langhorne, PA 19047


Plunkett Louis Swift Funeral Home
529 N York Rd
Hatboro, PA 19040


Roosevelt Memorial Park
2701 Old Lincoln Hwy
Feasterville Trevose, PA 19053


Silva Memorial Design & Granite Company
111 2nd St Pike
Southampton, PA 18966


Wetzel and Son
501 Easton Rd
Willow Grove, PA 19090


Spotlight on Cosmoses

Consider the Cosmos ... a flower that floats where others anchor, that levitates above the dirt with the insouciance of a daydream. Its petals are tissue-paper thin, arranged around a yolk-bright center like rays from a child’s sun drawing, but don’t mistake this simplicity for naivete. The Cosmos is a masterclass in minimalism, each bloom a tiny galaxy spinning on a stem so slender it seems to defy physics. You’ve seen them in ditches, maybe, or flanking suburban mailboxes—spindly things that shrug off neglect, that bloom harder the less you care. But pluck a fistful, jam them into a vase between the carnations and the chrysanthemums, and watch the whole arrangement exhale. Suddenly there’s air in the room. Movement. The Cosmos don’t sit; they sway.

What’s wild is how they thrive on contradiction. Their name ... kosmos in Greek, a term Pythagoras might’ve used to describe the ordered universe ... but the flower itself is chaos incarnate. Leaves like fern fronds, fine as lace, dissect the light into a million shards. Stems that zig where others zag, creating negative space that’s not empty but alive, a lattice for shadows to play. And those flowers—eight petals each, usually, though you’d need a botanist’s focus to count them as they tremble. They come in pinks that blush harder in the sun, whites so pure they make lilies look dingy, crimsons that hum like a bass note under all that pastel. Pair them with zinnias, and the zinnias gain levity. Pair them with sage, and the sage stops smelling like a roast and starts smelling like a meadow.

Florists underestimate them. Too common, they say. Too weedy. But this is the Cosmos’ secret superpower: it refuses to be precious. While orchids sulk in their pots and roses demand constant praise, the Cosmos just ... grows. It’s the people’s flower, democratic, prolific, a bloom that doesn’t know it’s supposed to play hard to get. Snip a stem, and three more will surge up to replace it. Leave it in a vase, and it’ll drink water like it’s still rooted in earth, petals quivering as if laughing at the concept of mortality. Days later, when the lilacs have collapsed into mush, the Cosmos stands tall, maybe a little faded, but still game, still throwing its face toward the window.

And the varieties. The ‘Sea Shells’ series, petals rolled into tiny flutes, as if each bloom were frozen mid-whisper. The ‘Picotee,’ edges dipped in rouge like a lipsticked kiss. The ‘Double Click’ varieties, pom-poms of petals that mock the very idea of minimalism. But even at their frilliest, Cosmos never lose that lightness, that sense that a stiff breeze could send them spiraling into the sky. Arrange them en masse, and they’re a cloud of color. Use one as a punctuation mark in a bouquet, and it becomes the sentence’s pivot, the word that makes you rethink everything before it.

Here’s the thing about Cosmos: they’re gardeners’ jazz. Structured enough to follow the rules—plant in sun, water occasionally, wait—but improvisational in their beauty, their willingness to bolt toward the light, to flop dramatically, to reseed in cracks and corners where no flower has a right to be. They’re the guest who shows up to a black-tie event in a linen suit and ends up being the most photographed. The more you try to tame them, the more they remind you that control is an illusion.

Put them in a mason jar on a desk cluttered with bills, and the desk becomes a still life. Tuck them behind a bride’s ear, and the wedding photos tilt toward whimsy. They’re the antidote to stiffness, to the overthought, to the fear that nothing blooms without being coddled. Next time you pass a patch of Cosmos—straggling by a highway, maybe, or tangled in a neighbor’s fence—grab a stem. Take it home. Let it remind you that resilience can be delicate, that grace doesn’t require grandeur, that sometimes the most breathtaking things are the ones that grow as if they’ve got nothing to prove. You’ll stare. You’ll smile. You’ll wonder why you ever bothered with fussier flowers.