Petals & Roots: Bring Beautiful Primroses into Your Home For an Easy and Timeless Spring Refresh

You can style this design in vintage containers you already own

Pink hyacinths being planted into a pink vintage ceramic vessel
(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

We are all ready for some fresh spring color in our lives. One of the simplest and most effective ways of bringing this into our homes is with some beautifully styled, quintessentially spring plants. And nothing beats primulas, in my opinion.

I was inspired to create this design by my love of playing around with vintage vessels, mixing and matching textures and styles to make something truly original and elegant, with a traditional feel.

What I Used to Create This Primula Display

Primroses in plastic pots, nect to a mix of vintage containers, pots, tins and planters

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

How to Create Your Own Spring Primula Centerpiece

Hands planting a pale yellow primrose plant into a vintage terracotta pot

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

The whole idea with this design is to try to use containers you already have. Look for contrasting textures with complementing colors. Everything I picked out had tones of brown, pink and red in it, which I love against the creamy yellow and pink flowers I picked out.

The first step is to give your plants a water whilst they are still in their plastic pots. You might need to knock some of the compost off, or add a little into your containers, to make sure they fit properly. Then firm them in by pressing down gently.

A pale purple primrose next to empty pale pink vintage ceramic planter

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

With the hyacinths, gently tease the roots of the bulbs apart to separate, and then you can re-pot them into your choice of vessel.

To lock in moisture and also as a lovely, decorative finish, I added some moss from the garden on top of the compost in this vessel, which gives it a gorgeous, natural finish.

Primroses potted in ceramic containers and recycled tins

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

If your tins or recycled vessels are a bit deeper than some of your other pots, add a layer of compost into the bottom, mixed with some grit or stones if you have any.

I always leave the excess foliage spilling out over the edges to give this design a naturalistic feel.

Once they are all potted up and you have brushed any excess soil away, you can cluster them together and arrange on a dining table or kitchen island for a fresh and vibrant seasonal display.

Hands dividing pink hyacinth bulbs apart, showing long white roots

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

I've had a lot of comments on this design about drainage holes. You an always drill some drainage holes into your containers, especially the tins or terracotta pots, and sit them on a saucer or tray to aid drainage.

However, you might not want to do this if you have a beautiful vintage ceramic vessel, and I'm here to tell you that you don't have to. You can still take these seasonal plants and put them into the yard once they have flowered and faded indoors, as long as you don't over-water them, which can lead to root rot.

Keep the watering to a minimum, and you could also add a layer of charcoal or river rocks to the bottom of your containers, to create a reservoir for excess water to collect in, thus taking it away from the roots and creating better drainage.

This way, you can absolutely keep these plants indoors in your choice of vessel, and plant them out after they have flowered to keep them going for years to come.

Hands planting pink hyacinths into a pink vintage ceramic container, next to potted primroses

(Image credit: Future/Esme Mai Photography)

Your Primrose Styling Kit


Petals & Roots is a weekly video series fronted by me, Rachel Bull, Head of Gardens at Homes & Gardens. Every weekend on social, I share my seasonal gardening and flower arranging expertise and advice.

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Rachel Bull
Head of Gardens

Rachel is a gardening editor, floral designer, flower grower and gardener. Her journalism career began on Country Living magazine, sparking a love of container gardening and wild planting. After several years as editor of floral art magazine The Flower Arranger, Rachel became a floral designer and stylist, before joining Homes & Gardens in 2023. She writes and presents the brand's weekly gardening and floristry social series Petals & Roots. An expert in cut flowers, she is particularly interested in sustainable gardening methods and growing flowers and herbs for wellbeing. Last summer, she was invited to Singapore to learn about the nation state's ambitious plan to create a city in nature, discovering a world of tropical planting and visionary urban horticulture.