Flower Seeds

Flower seeds bring color, texture, pollinators, fragrance, cutting stems, dried blooms, and edible petals into the garden. This collection includes annual and perennial flowers, heirloom favorites, certified organic options, and open-pollinated varieties for beds, borders, containers, and cutting rows.

Choose flower seeds for bouquets, pollinator gardens, cottage-style plantings, dried arrangements, and season-long beauty. From zinnias and cosmos to calendula, celosia, sunflowers, poppies, snapdragons, and perennial blooms, these flowers help make the garden feel alive.

Hopi Black Dye - Organic Sunflower Seeds
Hopi Black Dye - Organic Sunflower Seeds
Hopi Black Dye - Organic Sunflower Seeds
Sale price:$3.96 Regular price: $4.95
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Peach Melba - Nasturtium Seeds
Peach Melba - Nasturtium Seeds
Peach Melba - Nasturtium Seeds
Price:$4.35
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Picotee - Cosmos Seeds
Picotee - Cosmos Seeds
Picotee - Cosmos Seeds
Sale price:$3.16 Regular price: $3.95
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Flamingo Feather - Celosia Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Flamingo Feather - Celosia Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Flamingo Feather - Celosia Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Price:On Sale from $5.95
On Sale New for 2026
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Gold - Yarrow Seeds
Gold - Yarrow Seeds
Gold - Yarrow Seeds
Price:$3.95
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Red Peony - Poppy Seeds
Red Peony - Poppy Seeds
Red Peony - Poppy Seeds
Price:$3.95
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Orange Wonder - Snapdragon Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Orange Wonder - Snapdragon Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Orange Wonder - Snapdragon Seeds - Certified Naturally Grown (CNG)
Price:$5.95
Sold Out New for 2026
Jubilee Gem - Organic Centaurea Seeds
Jubilee Gem - Organic Centaurea Seeds
Jubilee Gem - Organic Centaurea Seeds
Price:$4.95
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Lauren's Grape - Poppy Seeds
Lauren's Grape - Poppy Seeds
Lauren's Grape - Poppy Seeds
Price:$3.95
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Starfire Mix - Signet Marigold Seeds
Starfire Mix - Signet Marigold Seeds
Starfire Mix - Signet Marigold Seeds
Price:$3.95
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Marmalade - Rudbeckia Seeds
Marmalade - Rudbeckia Seeds
Marmalade - Rudbeckia Seeds
Price:$3.95
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Pink Rocket - Organic Larkspur Seeds
Pink Rocket - Organic Larkspur Seeds
Pink Rocket - Organic Larkspur Seeds
Price:$4.95
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Choosing Flowers for Your Garden

A flower garden can begin with one bright row or grow into a season-long planting for cutting, pollinators, and color around the home. Annuals such as zinnias, cosmos, sunflowers, calendula, and celosia bloom in their first season, while biennials and perennials often take longer to settle in but can return for years.

Choose a mix of heights, flower shapes, and bloom times. Tall flowers make strong backdrops and cutting rows, while compact varieties suit borders and containers. Include open-centered blooms for bees, branching varieties for repeated cutting, and a few flowers that dry well for use after summer has passed.

Begin with the flowers you most want to see or bring indoors, then add supporting plants for texture, fragrance, and a longer season of bloom.

Shop by Garden

Cut Flowers

Cut Flowers

Focal flowers, fillers, and branching varieties for fresh bouquets and repeated cutting.
Pollinator Flowers

Pollinator Flowers

Nectar- and pollen-rich blooms for bees and beneficial insects.
Perennial Flowers

Perennial Flowers

Long-lived flowers that can return year after year in suitable climates.

Browse by Plant

Zinnia07
Heirloom Flower Seeds_Zinnia_Bucktown Seed Company-01
Sunflowers07
Heirloom Flower Seed - Sunflowers - Bucktown Seed Company-01
Cosmos05
Cosmos
Celosia04
Celosia
Rudbeckia02
Rudbeckia
Nasturtium03
Nasturtium
Marigold04
Heirloom Flowers Seeds - Marigold Seed - Bucktown Seed Company
Poppy04
Poppy
Calendula04
Heirloom Herb Seeds_Calendula_Bucktown Seed Company

Before You Sow

Annual, Biennial & Perennial Flowers

Annual flowers such as zinnias, cosmos, sunflowers, and celosia bloom in their first season. Biennials such as some sweet Williams and certain wildflowers usually grow leaves first and flower after winter. Perennials such as echinacea, rudbeckia, yarrow, lavender, and monarda may return for years once established.

Direct Sow or Start Indoors?

Sunflowers, cosmos, calendula, bachelor’s buttons, larkspur, poppies, nasturtiums, and many wildflowers are commonly direct sown. Snapdragons, celosia, strawflowers, dahlias, and other slow or heat-loving flowers often benefit from an indoor start.

Cut, Deadhead or Leave for Seed?

Cutting flowers often encourages the plants to send up more blooms, keeping the garden full and productive through the season. Leave a few favorite flowers to ripen for seed, feed the birds, or stand through winter with their shape still intact.

Flower Seed Questions

Sunflowers, zinnias, cosmos, calendula, bachelor’s buttons, nasturtiums, marigolds, and many wildflowers are dependable choices for beginners. Most establish quickly, bloom in their first season, and need little more than sun, workable soil, and steady moisture while young.

Many can. Sunflowers, cosmos, calendula, bachelor’s buttons, larkspur, poppies, nasturtiums, sweet peas, and wildflowers are commonly direct sown. Some prefer cool soil, while warm-season flowers such as zinnias should wait until frost danger has passed.

Yes. Perennial flowers such as echinacea, rudbeckia, yarrow, lavender, monarda, and some daisies can return for years once established. Their winter survival depends on the variety, local climate, and good drainage.

Zinnias, snapdragons, celosia, cosmos, sunflowers, dahlias, strawflowers, marigold, bachelor’s buttons, and calendula are all useful for cutting. Branching varieties often provide the longest harvest when flowers are picked regularly.

Look for a mix of open-centered blooms, tubular flowers, and different bloom times. Cosmos, sunflowers, borage, calendula, echinacea, monarda, lavender, rudbeckia, yarrow, and bachelor’s buttons all offer useful nectar or pollen.

Yes. Compact zinnias, calendula, nasturtiums, marigolds, dwarf sunflowers, alyssum, violas, and many smaller wildflowers grow well in pots. Use containers with drainage and choose a pot large enough for the plant’s mature size.

It depends on the crop. Snapdragons, celosia, strawflowers, and dahlias often benefit from an indoor start, while poppies, larkspur, sweet peas, sunflowers, and many wildflowers are usually easiest when sown where they will grow.

Grow a Garden in Bloom

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Freshly Cut Blooms Seed Kit

Six flower varieties chosen for cutting, arranging, and a steady season of fresh bouquets.

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Edible Petals Seed Kit

A colorful mix of edible flowers for salads, garnishes, drinks, and garden-to-table beauty.

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Homegrown Wellness Seed Kit

Six useful herbs and flowers traditionally grown for tea, fragrance, and everyday household use.

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