
Mixed Colour Flowers
Pre-blended packets for layered, abundant planting







Strawflower Helichrysum Swiss Giant Mix
Helichrysum bracteatum 'Swiss Giant Mix' (syn


Swan River Daisies Mixed
Brachycome iberidifolia 'Mixed' Swan River Daisy Mixed Masses…

Sweet Pea Bishy Barnabee Mix
Lathyrus odoratus 'Bishy Barnabee Mix' Our House Blend…








Growing mixed flowers — your questions answered
Why choose mixed colour seed varieties?
Mixed varieties are perfect when you want the cottage garden's natural diversity. Each packet contains seeds across a range of tones — you might get pink, white, blue, and purple from a single sowing of mixed cornflowers. The result is the layered, abundant look that defines cottage style, without the work of buying multiple colours separately.
Can I predict the colour balance in a mix?
Not precisely. Seed companies aim for a balanced mix in each packet, but exact ratios vary. You'll typically get a representative spread of the named colours, but some shades may dominate or be sparse in any given sowing. This unpredictability is part of the charm — each garden becomes unique.
What pairs well with mixed-colour plantings?
Mixed planting needs strong supporting structure. Plain dark green foliage, silver-leaved plants, and a deliberate framework of evergreen or architectural plants give the mixed colours somewhere to settle. White flowers among a mixed planting calm everything down and let the other colours breathe. Avoid placing two mixed varieties directly next to each other — it can become visually noisy.
Are mixed varieties good value?
Often, yes. A single packet of mixed cornflowers gives you what would otherwise need four or five separate-colour packets to achieve. For impulse cottage gardeners and beginners, this is genuinely excellent value. For gardeners with a specific colour scheme in mind, single-colour seed packets give more control.

