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How to Style Spring Florals: Tips for Every Wardrobe

Arielle Charnas · May 28, 2026 · Leave a Comment

arielle charnas How to Style Spring Florals

Florals come back every spring without fail. But this season they feel different — bolder, more maximalist, less apologetic about being loud. The kind of print that actually stops you mid-scroll.

The inspiration for this post comes from a stunning edit on Arielle Charnas’s LTK featuring pieces from the MyTheresa x Dolce & Gabbana collection. Luxury pieces, yes. But the styling principles behind every look? Those apply to any floral hanging in your wardrobe right now. Here’s how to wear them well.

Start With One Floral Piece, Not Several

This is the rule that makes bold florals wearable for most people. One statement floral piece per outfit. That’s it.

A floral dress, a printed skirt, a bold top — whichever piece is doing the heavy lifting should be the only print in the look. Everything else stays solid and simple. Neutral shoes. A plain bag. Minimal jewelry. The floral earns its place when it isn’t competing with anything else for attention.

It sounds obvious but it’s easy to get excited and layer print on print. Resist that urge. The restraint is what makes the outfit look intentional rather than chaotic.

The Easy Formula for Wearing a Floral Dress

A floral dress is the most accessible starting point because the outfit is essentially already built for you. You just have to style around it without overcomplicating things.

The formula is straightforward. Floral dress plus a simple flat or strappy sandal plus one understated accessory. Done. The dress is doing all the work, so your shoes, bag, and jewelry should stay quiet. A nude or tan sandal disappears into the look. A clean white sneaker keeps it casual. A barely-there heeled sandal takes it somewhere more evening-ready.

Midi and maxi lengths are particularly easy to work with this season. They feel grown-up and considered, and the length means you don’t need much else to make the outfit feel complete.

Floral Bottoms: The Lower-Commitment Option

Not everyone wants to commit to a full floral dress and that’s completely fine. A floral skirt or a pair of printed trousers gives you the print without the full immersion, and it’s actually a smarter way to work florals into a wardrobe that skews mostly neutral.

The styling here is simple. Floral bottom, plain top. White works best. Black is a close second. Cream, if the floral has warm tones in it. That’s genuinely all you need.

A floral wide-leg trouser with a fitted white tee tucked in is one of those combinations that looks effortless but reads as very put-together. A floral wrap skirt with a plain black bodysuit is equally easy. The top fades back and the print gets the spotlight it deserves.

Florals in Swimwear and Resort Dressing

Bold florals and swimwear are a natural pairing. The beach and pool context gives the print permission to be as loud as it wants to be, which is probably why florals have always dominated resort collections.

The styling principle here is the same as everywhere else though. Keep everything around the swimwear simple. A solid neutral sarong or cover-up, flat sandals in tan or white, sunglasses with a clean frame. Let the floral one-piece or bikini be the statement and resist the urge to pile on accessories.

If you’re going from beach to lunch or an afternoon out, a plain linen shirt or lightweight knit thrown over a floral swimsuit as a cover-up keeps the look cohesive without trying too hard.

How Texture Makes a Floral Feel More Interesting

A flat floral print is fine. A floral print with texture? That’s where it gets genuinely interesting.

Lace trim on a floral dress adds a layer of depth without adding more color or pattern. Ruching on a floral mini creates movement and dimension that a flat print alone doesn’t have. These details make a simpler or less expensive floral piece feel more considered and elevated.

If you already own a basic floral dress and want to make it feel fresher this season, this is actually the easiest trick. Add a lace-edged slip underneath. Try a ruched belt to create shape at the waist. Small textural additions go a long way with print.

Pull a Color From the Floral for Your Accessories

This is a styling trick that not enough people use and it makes such a difference.

Most florals contain at least four or five colors. Rather than defaulting to neutral accessories every single time, look closely at the print and pull one color from it for your shoes or bag. Not every color. Just one.

A floral with coral in it pairs beautifully with a coral heel or a terracotta bag. A floral with cobalt blue running through it looks sharp with a blue sandal. It ties the outfit together in a way that feels cohesive without being matchy-matchy, which is exactly the balance you’re going for.

If you look at the floral edit on Arielle Charnas’s LTK, this principle is right there in the styling. The orange heeled sandals at the bottom of the collage aren’t neutral, but they work precisely because they’re pulling from the warmth already present in the prints throughout the collection.

Final Thoughts on Florals

Bold florals are more wearable than they look at first glance. The print does a lot of the styling work for you — you just have to know how to work around it rather than against it. One statement piece, simple everything else, and a bit of confidence in the color you’re working with.

Browse the full floral edit on Arielle Charnas’s LTK to see the complete collection and shop pieces directly. Whether you’re looking for a full look or just a starting point, it’s worth a scroll.

Style Advice Arielle Charnas, LTK, spring style, Style Advice, Style Guides, Styling tips

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