A practical guide to bouquet styles and indoor plants that suit Father’s Day — built around the idea that “masculine” floral gifting usually means structure, texture, and muted or bold colour rather than soft and pastel.
Part 1: Bouquet Styles
1. The Structured/Architectural Bouquet
Clean lines, minimal fuss, often arranged in a tight hand-tied bunch or a low, square vase.
- Best flowers: Anthurium, calla lily, bird of paradise, protea
- Why it works: These flowers have bold, sculptural shapes rather than frilly petals, so the bouquet reads as modern and deliberate rather than “pretty.”
- Good for: Dads who like minimalist or contemporary interiors, or who’d appreciate something that looks more like a design object than a traditional bouquet.
2. The Rustic/Wildflower Bouquet
Loose, textured, slightly unkempt on purpose — think allotment or countryside rather than florist’s counter.
- Best flowers: Sunflowers, thistle, eucalyptus, wheat or grass stems, dahlias
- Why it works: Mixed heights and natural greenery give it an outdoorsy, unpretentious feel.
- Good for: Dads who garden, hike, or just prefer “natural” over “polished.”
3. The Deep & Moody Bouquet
Rich, saturated colour palette — burgundy, navy-adjacent purples, forest green, burnt orange.
- Best flowers: Dark red roses, burgundy dahlias, deep orange ranunculus, dark scabiosa, eucalyptus or pine foliage
- Why it works: Avoids anything pastel; reads as warm but serious.
- Good for: A more classic, “give him a proper bouquet” approach without veering twee.
4. The Foliage-Forward Bouquet
Greenery does most of the work, with flowers as accents rather than the main event.
- Best flowers/foliage: Eucalyptus, olive branch, ferns, with small pops of colour from craspedia (billy balls) or chrysanthemum
- Why it works: Feels more like a botanical arrangement than a traditional “bunch of flowers,” which some men find easier to receive.
- Good for: Dads who say “I’m not really a flowers person” — this style edges into plant territory.
5. The Single-Stem or Small Cluster
Sometimes simplicity is the move — one or three striking stems rather than a full bouquet.
- Best flowers: A single large protea, three calla lilies, or a small cluster of sunflowers tied with twine or brown paper
- Why it works: Low-key, doesn’t feel fussy, and works well alongside another gift (card, whisky, tools) rather than as the whole present.
Practical notes
- Wrapping: Brown kraft paper, twine, or a simple paper sleeve reads as gender-neutral and understated; avoid cellophane and ribbon bows if going for a “masculine” feel.
- Vase pairing: A plain glass cylinder, ceramic crock, or even a mason jar suits these styles better than an ornate vase.
- Scent: If he’s not keen on strong floral smells, lean on eucalyptus, foliage, and structural blooms (anthurium, protea, calla) which have little to no scent.
Part 2: Indoor Plants
Good as a standalone gift or paired with a small bouquet. Grouped by what kind of dad you’re buying for.
For the low-maintenance / forgetful waterer
- Snake plant (Sansevieria): Tolerates weeks of neglect, low light, rarely needs repotting.
- ZZ plant (Zamioculcas zamiifolia): Glossy leaves, thrives on benign neglect, very forgiving.
- Pothos: Easy, fast-growing, trails nicely from a shelf — good if he wants something that visibly does stuff.
For the desk or office
- Succulents (echeveria, jade plant): Compact, low water needs, look tidy on a desk.
- Cactus: Same logic — minimal care, doesn’t mind being forgotten over a busy week.
- Air plant (Tillandsia): No soil needed, can sit in a small dish or on a shelf — good novelty factor.
For the dad who actually likes plants/gardening
- Fiddle leaf fig or rubber plant: Statement floor plants with big, architectural leaves — a step up if he already keeps plants alive.
- Monstera (Swiss cheese plant): Bold leaf shape, satisfying to watch grow, slightly more of a “project.”
- Bonsai tree: A classic gift-with-meaning option if he likes a bit of ongoing care and ritual.
For the “I don’t really do plants” dad
- Aloe vera: Practical angle — useful for burns/skin, easy care, gives it a purpose beyond decoration.
- Herb pot (basil, rosemary, chives): Useful in the kitchen, low commitment, good if styled as “for cooking” rather than “for decorating.”
- Money tree (Pachira aquatica): Often marketed with a “good luck/prosperity” angle, sturdy and easy — works as a slightly novelty gift.
Pairing plants with pots
- Concrete, terracotta, or matte black pots generally suit a more masculine aesthetic better than glazed pastel ceramics.
- A wooden plant stand or simple metal frame elevates a plant from “gift shop item” to “actually fits his space.”
Quick decision guide
| If he’s… | Try… |
|---|---|
| Minimalist, modern taste | Structured bouquet (calla lily/anthurium) + snake plant or ZZ plant |
| Outdoorsy / gardener | Rustic wildflower bouquet + fiddle leaf fig or herb pot |
| Says “not a flowers guy” | Foliage-forward bouquet or skip flowers entirely, go with a succulent/cactus |
| Likes whisky, classic gifts | Deep & moody bouquet, single protea stem, or a bonsai |
| Busy, forgetful, travels a lot | Any bouquet (it’s temporary anyway) + ZZ plant or pothos |
Tip: if budget allows, pairing a small, simple bouquet (single-stem or foliage-forward) with a low-maintenance plant covers both “thoughtful gesture now” and “something that lasts” — without going overboard on either.

