Discover Your Birth Flower


January belongs to the carnation: — a flower of admiration, distinction, and love that endures.

February carries the violet: faithfulness and spiritual depth, tied to devotion since ancient Greece. 

March is the daffodil: first through the frost, a symbol of new beginnings and quiet courage.

April holds the daisy: innocent and true, its name derived from “day’s eye” for the way it opens each morning toward the sun.

May brings the lily of the valley: delicate and bell-shaped, long associated with the return of happiness.

June belongs to the rose: though its meaning shifts entirely with color: red for passionate love, blush for admiration, white for purity. 

July is the larkspur: light-hearted and luminous, with blue signaling dignity and pink a joyful unpredictability.

August carries the gladiolus: whose name comes from the Latin word for sword — speaking of strength, moral character, and those who remain standing.

September belongs to the aster: star-like and quietly protective.

October is the marigold: warm and vivid. In Day of the Dead traditions it guides the spirits home — a flower that understands threshold and memory.

November carries the chrysanthemum: a symbol of longevity and loyalty across many Eastern cultures.

December closes the year with holly: hope, prosperity, and the warmth of a well-wish as one year yields to the next.