

Someone you know has lost a parent, partner, sibling, or close friend. You’ve only just heard. You want to send flowers but you’re not sure what kind, where to send them, or what to write on the card, and you don’t want to get this wrong.
Funeral flowers in Melbourne feel high-stakes, but the rules are simpler than they look once a florist walks you through them. After 20+ years arranging sympathy and funeral flowers from our Carrum Downs shop, this is the guide we wish more people had on hand before they rang us, often in tears.
The quick reference below covers what to send and where it goes. The sections after it cover the why, the cultural points, and what to avoid.
| What you’re sending | Best arrangement type | Where it goes |
|---|---|---|
| Personal sympathy to the family | Sheaf or hand-tied bouquet | Family home |
| At-service tribute from close family | Casket spray or single rose | Casket or on top of the casket |
| At-service tribute from extended family or friends | Standing spray or wreath | Service venue |
| Workplace or group sympathy | Large standing arrangement or basket | Service venue or family home |
| A quiet personal gesture | Posy or small posy bowl | Family home |
| Sending from interstate or overseas | Network-delivered arrangement | Family home or service venue |
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Flower symbolism is partly cultural convention and partly florist tradition, so treat these meanings as orientation rather than rules. A handful of flowers come up over and over in sympathy work.
For a deeper read on what specific flowers traditionally signal in sympathy work, see our existing post on the language of sympathy flowers.
The right arrangement depends less on what flowers you like and more on your relationship to the family. A quick guide.

There are two main destinations: the family home or the service venue. They serve different purposes, and the timing for each is different.
Family home arrangements are read in private. They tend to be more personal in tone, smaller in scale, and the card matters more because the family will read it without an audience. Send within 48 hours of hearing. If you’ve had a busy week and only got around to ordering on the weekend, send anyway. Late flowers are still welcome flowers.
Service venue arrangements are public. They’re read by everyone attending and often photographed for the order of service or the family album. Standing sprays, wreaths, and large baskets work well here. The rule for service deliveries is to arrange them for the morning of the service, not the day before. Flowers held overnight in a venue lose their best look, and most service venues don’t have refrigerated storage. Same-day delivery across Victoria covers the south-east corridor easily, and Interflora and Petals handle anywhere we don’t.
For casket sprays and tributes that need to sit on or near the casket during the service, ring the funeral director first. They’ll confirm what they need delivered, when, and whether they want the card removed for the service or left visible. Funeral directors coordinate deliveries from multiple senders for a single service, so a quick call saves them a logistics headache and saves you the worry that your flowers won’t be where they should be.
What if you’ve missed the funeral? Sending flowers a week or two later is welcome, not late. Many people find the quiet weeks after a service the loneliest part. A small bouquet to the family home with a card that just says you’re thinking of them lands harder than another arrangement at the service would have.
Card messages get overthought. Short and sincere works. Long and performative doesn’t. A few examples for different relationships.
Michelle handwrites the card on request rather than printing it, which makes a difference on a tribute that will be kept. Just ask when you order.

This is where a florist who arranges these every week earns their fee. Five things that come up regularly and catch people out.
For services held on a Monday or Tuesday, place the order by the previous Friday afternoon. Funeral directors coordinate deliveries from multiple senders for a single service, and confirming on Friday gives them time to fit your tribute into the order of service and the room layout. Ordering on Sunday night for a Tuesday service is technically possible, but it puts you near the back of the queue and the funeral director may have already finalised the visible arrangements before yours arrives.
To order, ring our shop, order online, or come in. We’ll talk you through what to send, where to send it, and what the card should say if you’re not sure. We’ve been arranging these from Carrum Downs Regional Shopping Centre for over 15 years, and same-day delivery across Victoria with Interflora and Petals support beyond it means almost any Melbourne service is within reach.







