For years, florals in the home have followed a familiar rhythm: a vase on a table, a carefully tied bouquet, a fleeting nod to nature before petals wilt and are discarded. But a quiet revolution is blooming in interiors, and it’s reshaping how we inhabit our spaces. Flowers are no longer just decoration. They are sculpture, architecture, and art – fleeting, living installations that demand attention, contemplation, and emotion. Leading this shift is Sydney-based creative Lauren Croghan-Johnson, founder of Studio Lauren Flora, whose work transforms the everyday home into a canvas for nature’s most ephemeral beauty.
With over 15 years in the creative events industry, Croghan-Johnson brings an instinctive eye for form, texture, and composition to every project. Her studio spans events, design, and sustainability, but at its core, it’s about translating the complexity of the natural world into spatial experiences. Drawing inspiration from art, architecture, and the sculptural possibilities of flora and food, she creates installations that are as much about the environment they inhabit as the flowers themselves.
“What drew me to site-specific floral design was form and texture in all of nature, rather than just beautiful flowers in a vase,” she explains. “I gravitate towards art that reflects the natural world in all its complexities – line, shape, colour, and form. Flowers are often the vehicle to convey emotion, but they are not the only way I create. Site-specific design feels natural to me because it transforms a space and gives it purpose, even for a short moment.”
Reimagining Flowers in Space
Spatial floral design challenges everything we think we know about flowers. Traditional bouquets are flat, front-facing, and static. Croghan-Johnson’s creations occupy three dimensions, drawing on the surrounding space as part of the artwork itself. Depth, movement, negative space, and structural flow are all carefully considered, creating a sculptural effect that feels organic and alive.
A branch may swoop across a corner, catching sunlight that filters through a window. A cluster of banksia might spill from a console, drawing the eye upward, while native foliage breathes texture into a minimalist room. Each installation is a dialogue between the natural world and the interior environment – a moment of suspended beauty that cannot be replicated.
When designing for a home, nothing is overlooked. Colour, light, furniture, artwork, and textile textures all inform her choices. “Sometimes it’s the size of a room or the light that dictates the first idea,” she says. “Other times, it’s a client’s favourite flower or a seasonal inspiration. Each piece is unique, created to enhance its surroundings and the way a person experiences their own space.”
Living Art
Croghan-Johnson’s installations occupy the space between interior styling, sculpture, and living art. Her favourite approach leans into the latter: a transient, intertwined arrangement of natural materials that invites pause, reflection, and a moment of intimacy. Unlike a painting or decorative object, flowers shift and bloom and fade. Their impermanence is part of their power, bringing seasonality and presence into the home.
Her work often incorporates techniques inspired by Ikebana, the Japanese art of flower arrangement, where line and direction precede fullness. Asymmetry and imbalance create natural logic rather than human symmetry. The result is spontaneous yet deliberate, structured yet free, capturing the essence of the natural world within the walls of a home.
Unexpected Spaces
While dining tables and kitchen benches are obvious choices, Croghan-Johnson delights in exploring the unexpected. Bathrooms, low-lit corners, console tables, and intimate nooks can all become sites for contemplative floral moments. These smaller, hidden installations allow for quiet discovery, turning everyday spaces into pockets of living art.
For larger-scale installations, she favours hearty Australian natives and foliages that offer longevity and structural presence. Phillica, banksia varieties, blushing brides, and flowering wax are favourites, chosen not just for durability but for sculptural potential. These robust forms allow the flowers to dominate a space without requiring constant attention, elevating a room through texture, scale, and movement.
Bringing the Concept Home
Croghan-Johnson encourages anyone to experiment, even without professional guidance. Start small: choose a corner, pick a colour palette, and gather a few stems from a local florist or market. Experiment with vessels and arrangements, allowing movement and texture to guide you. For a simple, dramatic effect, combine gum branches for height and sweep with seasonal produce such as pumpkins, citrus, or olives to create contrast and rhythm.
Flowers, she reminds, are deeply sensory. Smell is as important as sight, especially in enclosed spaces. Too much fragrance can overwhelm, but the right balance evokes memory, mood, and emotion, transforming a room more powerfully than any static decoration.
Croghan-Johnson’s most unusual installation was a flowering desert around a sculpture in an art gallery, designed to reflect the complexity of the Australian outback – dry and still, yet alive with vibrant growth. It was a living installation that elevated both the artwork and the space, a perfect example of her philosophy: flowers are not ornaments; they are experiences.
A Moment in Time
In her hands, a home becomes a gallery, and flowers become living moments of art. They invite pause, reflection, and a heightened awareness of the present. Their beauty is fleeting, their presence profound. In Lauren Croghan-Johnson’s world, florals are more than decoration – they are a way to inhabit time, space, and the natural world with eyes wide open.
Whether you are rethinking a corner of your living room, experimenting with native blooms, or commissioning a large-scale installation, the lesson is clear: flowers are no longer just a vase on a table. They are architecture, sculpture, and living art. They transform the home, the mood, and the moment – and in doing so, they transform us.