Bouquet Paper
Kraft and tissue wrapping paper for flower bouquets.
Bouquet paper is the florist's finishing layer: it frames the stems and carries the shop's look. Kraft reads natural, tissue adds softness.
- Kraft and tissue weights
- Printed or plain sheets
- Waterproof options
- Florist sheet packs
Waterproof sheets protect against damp stems.
“We sent them a candle jar and a Pinterest board. Two weeks later we had rigid boxes that made a $28 candle feel like a $60 one. Our repeat rate went up and honestly the box is half the reason.”
“The valve bags keep our roast fresh and the print quality is better than bags we paid twice as much for. Reorders take one email.”
The wrap is half the bouquet
Watch a florist finish a bunch: the flowers were chosen in thirty seconds, the wrapping takes two minutes. That layer is what separates a handful of stems from a presented bouquet, and it is the only part of the arrangement that carries the shop's name. Bouquet paper is, in effect, the florist's packaging line.
Kraft, tissue, and when to layer both
Kraft sheets give structure: the wrap holds a cone shape, survives the walk to the car, and reads natural and garden-adjacent. Tissue gives softness: layered inside kraft or used alone for delicate stems, it photographs beautifully and crushes into volume around sparse arrangements. Most shops run both and layer them, tissue against the flowers, kraft outside carrying the print.
Printed sheets put a logo or pattern on every bunch that leaves the counter. A single-color repeat on kraft is the workhorse; full-color on white suits event and wedding work.
The water problem
Cut stems are wet, and wet paper fails at the worst moment. Waterproof sheets, a poly-coated or waxed stock, go against the stems as the first layer so the outer wrap stays dry and the customer's car seat survives. For shops selling grab-and-go bunches into supermarkets, the waterproof layer is not optional; it is what keeps the display tidy through a day of handling.
Sheets come in florist-standard sizes, packed flat in bulk. Pair them with paper tags for care instructions and pricing, and the counter kit is complete.
Do you sell mixed packs?
Yes. A starter pack with kraft, tissue and waterproof sheets in shop-matched colors is the usual first order; reorders then split by whichever layer you use fastest.





