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bells of ireland

Bells of Ireland (Moluccella laevis) is a tall, dramatic stem instantly recognizable by its column of pale-green, cup-shaped calyces that look like a row of tiny lanterns. Despite the name, the flower isn't native to Ireland — the "bells" reference is purely a nod to its luck-bringing symbolism. For floral designers, it's one of the few truly verdant cut stems with serious vertical presence, which is why it appears in our most architectural spring and summer arrangements at Flower Icon.

Quick facts

Botanical Name Moluccella laevis
Common Names Bells of Ireland, Molucca balm, shellflower
Bloom Season Late spring through early autumn — peaks in July and August
Fragrance Light, herbaceous, faintly mint-like (the plant is a member of the mint family)
Vase Life 7–10 days (often the longest-lasting green in an arrangement)
Symbolism Good luck, good wishes, prosperity
Native To Western Asia — specifically Turkey, Syria, and the Caucasus

How to care for cut bells of Ireland

  • Re-cut the stem at a 45° angle when you receive it. The stems are surprisingly sturdy but benefit from a fresh cut for water uptake.
  • Each "bell" is technically a calyx surrounding a tiny white flower; these calyces hold moisture and bruise easily, so handle stems by the lower stalk only.
  • Strip any small leaves below the waterline.
  • Use clean, cool water with floral preservative. Bells of Ireland tolerates standard floral food well.
  • The stems can be slightly top-heavy — keep arrangements balanced and avoid tall, narrow vases that might tip.
  • Refresh water every 48 hours; re-cut a quarter inch each time.
  • Watch for tiny spines along some stems — trim carefully and handle with gentle pressure.

Vase life

Bells of Ireland is one of the longest-lasting cut greens you can buy — seven to ten days is typical, and stems often outlive every other flower in a mixed arrangement. After the rest of the bouquet has faded, the bells can be removed, hung upside-down in a dry, dark space, and dried for use in autumn arrangements; they hold their shape and color beautifully when dried.

Bouquet pairing ideas

  • Bells of Ireland + white roses + eucalyptus — clean, monochromatic, modern bridal
  • Bells of Ireland + dahlias + sunflowers — late-summer abundance
  • Bells of Ireland + peonies + lisianthus — soft pastel romance with a structural green spine
  • Bells of Ireland + hydrangea + ranunculus — lush, textural, garden-style
  • Bells of Ireland + lilies + delphinium — tall, elegant, columnar arrangements for events

For pairing references, see our deep pages on peony and cymbidium.

Symbolism and the "good luck" association

The Victorian language of flowers assigned bells of Ireland the meaning of "good luck" and "good wishes" — likely a wordplay reference to Ireland's national association with luck, despite the flower's actual origin in western Asia. In contemporary use, it appears in wedding bouquets to wish the couple luck and prosperity, in housewarming arrangements, and in March / St. Patrick's Day floral design where its rich green tone makes it a natural seasonal pick. Florists also reach for it in new-business openings and milestone celebrations — any moment where the gesture of "good luck" carries weight.

When bells of Ireland are in season

Although Moluccella laevis can technically be cultivated year-round in greenhouses, the strongest stems come from outdoor field-grown harvests between late June and early September. We feature bells of Ireland in custom event arrangements and on-request bouquets during this peak window — outside of those months, availability and quality vary.

Shop bells of Ireland at Flower Icon

Bells of Ireland is featured in our custom event and wedding work rather than our standard bouquet line. If you'd like an arrangement that incorporates it — for a wedding, an Irish-heritage celebration, a March opening, or any moment where a "good luck" gesture matters — we can build a custom bouquet around it during the May-through-September window. Reach out via our contact form to start a custom order.

Flower Icon is a designer flower studio at 181 2nd Street in San Francisco. We offer same-day delivery on select bouquets when ordered before 4 PM and free local pickup within one mile of the studio. Explore more flowers in our flower guide.