Florence Pugh Embraces Her Boho-iest Glam Yet—and Uses Real Flowers To Do It
Florals, for spring? Florence Pugh has a fresh and fun take on seasonal makeup and hair. Here’s exactly how she did it.

Reported by Vogue.
Florence Pugh has officially declared her warm-weather aesthetic, and it involves actual flowers in her hair. The actor — currently building anticipation ahead of her starring role in the forthcoming East of Eden — debuted what might be her most committed boho moment yet: a full floral beauty look that matched both the season and her buttery yellow Rodarte gown.
According to Vogue, hairstylist Hyungsun Ju pulled the look together with a half-up, half-down style nodding to the '90s — crown teased for volume, face-framing tendrils left intentionally loose. The finishing touch was genuinely unexpected: real clematis, lisianthus, and eustoma blooms woven through her hair, chosen to mirror the floral print of her dress. It's the kind of detail that sounds precious on paper but lands as effortlessly cool on Pugh.
Romantic, Not Precious
Makeup artist Ciara DeRóiste — whose client list spans Suki Waterhouse to Tilda Swinton — kept the face grounded in the same softly romantic energy. "I used a stain to bring a punchy pop of summer color while keeping the skin and freckles visibly natural, with a demi-warm brown waterline and balmy finish to lips and cheeks," she explained. The result: sun-kissed and saturated without veering into costume territory. Freckles showing, color intentional, nothing overdone.
This wasn't an isolated experiment. The week prior, Pugh had flown to Ibiza for designer Harris Reed's 30th birthday — showing up in artfully undone waves knotted with a Pucci scarf and aquamarine eyeliner. Two looks, same throughline: maximalist references handled with genuine ease. Her fashion orbit runs through Reed, Simone Rocha, and Rodarte — designers who trade in high drama and romantic tension — and her beauty choices follow that same instinct, whether she's wearing a deep plum lip or flashing her septum piercing.
Pugh isn't chasing a trend; she's building a point of view — and right now, it's blooming.
Read the original at Vogue.


