The Origin of Bouquet Blankets: A Mother’s Search for Comfort and Beauty
- Nathanael Farrelly
- Dec 7, 2025
- 1 min read

Before Bouquet Blankets existed, the world only knew one kind of bouquet blanket. Crochet. Nostalgic, yes. Charming, maybe. Expensive, timely, and not replicable, yes. Crochet bouquets were decorative keepsakes, not blankets you could wrap around a child, drape on a cozy chair, or use during a picnic in the backyard. They stretched. They unraveled. They stayed in one spot, usually on a shelf, admired but never lived with.
The need was simple. A blanket that felt like comfort, looked like art, photographed beautifully, and still belonged in the real world of children, couches, laundry days, and memories.
That need sat quietly in the background until a mother named Laurel began creating everything by hand for her daughter. She stitched cotton and linen together. She learned the weight of fabric, the breathability of natural fibers, and how softness grows over time. She wanted her daughter to feel loved, and surrounded by something beautiful. What if comfort and design could meet. What if a blanket could be both functional and a gift that never wilted.
Cotton linen quilt below. Hand sewn flowers above. Structured, practical, washable, long lasting. A blanket made to be used. A bouquet made to be gifted.
This became the first Bouquet Blanket. Created in a small home. Tested in a home. Loved instantly.
And that simple gap, the missing blanket the world did not have yet, finally had its answer.




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