Bishy Barnabee’s Cottage Garden

Dried Seed Heads & Grasses

The architectural side of nature — structure, texture, quiet drama

26 products
A hand holds three large Alliums Dried from Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden Ltd, featuring pinkish stems and spherical seed heads, set against a dark wooden background.
Dried Flowers

Alliums Dried

If you want to add instant structure, height,…

£7.00 View
Amaranthus Dried by Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden Ltd features deep red, feathery plumes that gracefully cascade against a textured gray wooden wall.
Dried Flowers

Amaranthus Dried

While most dried stems stand up straight, Amaranthus is designed to drape

£7.50 View
Close-up of Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden Ltd's Artemisia Dried bunch, with yellow and white clustered flowers on thin, intertwined stems, set against a dark gray background for a detailed, textured look.
Dried Flowers

Artemisia Dried

Dried Artemisia Bunch (Silver King) If your arrangement…

£7.00 View
Echinops Dried by Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden Ltd features spiky blue-grey Globe Thistle flower heads, artfully arranged on a rustic green wooden surface with peeling paint.
Dried Flowers

Echinops Dried

Dried Echinops Bunch (Globe Thistle) Echinops, or Globe…

£6.75 View
A hand displays Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden Ltd's Eucalyptus Dried, featuring round, pale green leaves in front of a rustic wood backdrop, evoking the serene spa aroma of eucalyptus.
Dried Flowers

Eucalyptus Dried

Dried Eucalyptus Bunch Eucalyptus is the ultimate "must-have"…

£7.95 View

Dried seed heads & grasses — your questions answered

What are dried seed heads used for?

Seed heads bring structure and texture that flowers alone cannot. They work as architectural focal points in arrangements (alliums, scabious, poppy heads), as gap-fillers and bulk-builders (nigella pods, umbellifers), or as the foundation of autumn and winter wreaths. Many also rattle gently when handled — a small everyday pleasure dried flowers don't share.

Do seed heads shed seeds at home?

Some will, gently — nigella pods in particular are full of tiny black seeds that rattle inside the papery shell and occasionally find their way out. Give bunches a shake outside when you first unwrap them. The shedding is rarely significant once they're settled in place and is part of the natural character of working with real, unprocessed plant material.

What's the difference between seed heads and grasses?

Seed heads are the structural remains of the plant's seed-producing stage — poppy capsules, scabious moons, nigella pods, allium globes. Grasses include both fluffy plumes (reed grass, bunny tails) and the more architectural awns of wheat or quaking grass. Both add texture, but seed heads tend toward shape and grasses toward movement.

Can I use them in wreaths?

Seed heads are arguably the best wreath material there is. Their flat backs and solid structure wire easily onto a wreath frame, they don't crush, and their muted tones suit autumn and winter perfectly. Snip stems short, wire individual heads in clusters of three, and tuck them between foliage and grasses for an organic, harvest-festival look.