
Wedding Gown™ Hydrangea
Double White “Bouquet” Blooms That Look Fresh All Season
Wedding Gown™ Hydrangea is the kind of plant that makes people walk closer. Each bloom cluster looks like a tiny bridal bouquet—layered, full, and noticeably “double,” with a refined white tone that brightens shady borders and entry plantings. It’s a bigleaf hydrangea with a more detailed, elevated flower style, so it pairs beautifully with classic foundation shrubs, cottage perennials, and crisp evergreens.
Instead of one quick bloom moment, this variety is known for extending the show when you keep up with light deadheading. In many gardens, flowers begin in late spring to early summer and continue in waves through the season, giving you that “always in bloom” feeling that’s hard to find in a compact shrub.
Compact, Tidy Size That Fits Beds Without Taking Over
If you love hydrangeas but hate the “where do I put this when it’s grown?” problem, Wedding Gown™ solves it. It’s naturally compact for a bigleaf type, making it easy to tuck into small foundation beds, front borders, and mixed shrub plantings where you want flowers without bulk. Many growers list it at roughly 3–4 ft, while plant-trial references often describe a shorter height with a wider spread—either way, it’s designed to stay manageable and garden-friendly.
This size also makes it a strong candidate for repeating in a planting (one of the simplest ways to give a landscape a designed feel). Use two or three along a walkway, or flank a porch with matching containers for a symmetrical, high-end look that doesn’t require constant pruning to keep it in bounds.
Shade-Loving Performance With A Long Bloom Window
Wedding Gown™ is happiest in part shade—especially morning sun with afternoon shade in warmer climates—where foliage stays lush, and blooms hold their color longer. In cooler climates, it can handle more sun if you keep moisture consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat. The result is a hydrangea that looks polished in real-life yards, not just in perfect display gardens.
Because it’s a white-blooming hydrangea, you’re not chasing soil pH to change the color. Instead, you’re focusing on the things that actually drive the “wow”: consistent moisture during growth, a mulch ring to stabilize the root zone, and siting that avoids crispy leaf edges. When those basics are right, this plant earns its keep for months.
Easy Care With Pruning That Protects Next Season’s Flowers
The smartest thing about Wedding Gown™ is also the easiest to mess up: pruning timing. This hydrangea is often described as a rebloomer that can flower on both old and new growth, which means it has more flexibility than many bigleaf types—but it still benefits from the “prune after flowering” mindset to protect buds and keep the show strong.
Think gently, not aggressively. Remove spent blooms to encourage additional flowering, clean out dead wood once you can see what’s alive in spring, and do shaping cuts right after a bloom flush if you need them. With that approach, you get a tidy plant, reliable flowers, and none of the heartbreak that comes from pruning away the season you were waiting for.
Double White “Bouquet” Blooms That Look Fresh All Season
Wedding Gown™ Hydrangea is the kind of plant that makes people walk closer. Each bloom cluster looks like a tiny bridal bouquet—layered, full, and noticeably “double,” with a refined white tone that brightens shady borders and entry plantings. It’s a bigleaf hydrangea with a more detailed, elevated flower style, so it pairs beautifully with classic foundation shrubs, cottage perennials, and crisp evergreens.
Instead of one quick bloom moment, this variety is known for extending the show when you keep up with light deadheading. In many gardens, flowers begin in late spring to early summer and continue in waves through the season, giving you that “always in bloom” feeling that’s hard to find in a compact shrub.
Compact, Tidy Size That Fits Beds Without Taking Over
If you love hydrangeas but hate the “where do I put this when it’s grown?” problem, Wedding Gown™ solves it. It’s naturally compact for a bigleaf type, making it easy to tuck into small foundation beds, front borders, and mixed shrub plantings where you want flowers without bulk. Many growers list it at roughly 3–4 ft, while plant-trial references often describe a shorter height with a wider spread—either way, it’s designed to stay manageable and garden-friendly.
This size also makes it a strong candidate for repeating in a planting (one of the simplest ways to give a landscape a designed feel). Use two or three along a walkway, or flank a porch with matching containers for a symmetrical, high-end look that doesn’t require constant pruning to keep it in bounds.
Shade-Loving Performance With A Long Bloom Window
Wedding Gown™ is happiest in part shade—especially morning sun with afternoon shade in warmer climates—where foliage stays lush, and blooms hold their color longer. In cooler climates, it can handle more sun if you keep moisture consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat. The result is a hydrangea that looks polished in real-life yards, not just in perfect display gardens.
Because it’s a white-blooming hydrangea, you’re not chasing soil pH to change the color. Instead, you’re focusing on the things that actually drive the “wow”: consistent moisture during growth, a mulch ring to stabilize the root zone, and siting that avoids crispy leaf edges. When those basics are right, this plant earns its keep for months.
Easy Care With Pruning That Protects Next Season’s Flowers
The smartest thing about Wedding Gown™ is also the easiest to mess up: pruning timing. This hydrangea is often described as a rebloomer that can flower on both old and new growth, which means it has more flexibility than many bigleaf types—but it still benefits from the “prune after flowering” mindset to protect buds and keep the show strong.
Think gently, not aggressively. Remove spent blooms to encourage additional flowering, clean out dead wood once you can see what’s alive in spring, and do shaping cuts right after a bloom flush if you need them. With that approach, you get a tidy plant, reliable flowers, and none of the heartbreak that comes from pruning away the season you were waiting for.
Original: $99.95
-70%$99.95
$29.98Description
Double White “Bouquet” Blooms That Look Fresh All Season
Wedding Gown™ Hydrangea is the kind of plant that makes people walk closer. Each bloom cluster looks like a tiny bridal bouquet—layered, full, and noticeably “double,” with a refined white tone that brightens shady borders and entry plantings. It’s a bigleaf hydrangea with a more detailed, elevated flower style, so it pairs beautifully with classic foundation shrubs, cottage perennials, and crisp evergreens.
Instead of one quick bloom moment, this variety is known for extending the show when you keep up with light deadheading. In many gardens, flowers begin in late spring to early summer and continue in waves through the season, giving you that “always in bloom” feeling that’s hard to find in a compact shrub.
Compact, Tidy Size That Fits Beds Without Taking Over
If you love hydrangeas but hate the “where do I put this when it’s grown?” problem, Wedding Gown™ solves it. It’s naturally compact for a bigleaf type, making it easy to tuck into small foundation beds, front borders, and mixed shrub plantings where you want flowers without bulk. Many growers list it at roughly 3–4 ft, while plant-trial references often describe a shorter height with a wider spread—either way, it’s designed to stay manageable and garden-friendly.
This size also makes it a strong candidate for repeating in a planting (one of the simplest ways to give a landscape a designed feel). Use two or three along a walkway, or flank a porch with matching containers for a symmetrical, high-end look that doesn’t require constant pruning to keep it in bounds.
Shade-Loving Performance With A Long Bloom Window
Wedding Gown™ is happiest in part shade—especially morning sun with afternoon shade in warmer climates—where foliage stays lush, and blooms hold their color longer. In cooler climates, it can handle more sun if you keep moisture consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat. The result is a hydrangea that looks polished in real-life yards, not just in perfect display gardens.
Because it’s a white-blooming hydrangea, you’re not chasing soil pH to change the color. Instead, you’re focusing on the things that actually drive the “wow”: consistent moisture during growth, a mulch ring to stabilize the root zone, and siting that avoids crispy leaf edges. When those basics are right, this plant earns its keep for months.
Easy Care With Pruning That Protects Next Season’s Flowers
The smartest thing about Wedding Gown™ is also the easiest to mess up: pruning timing. This hydrangea is often described as a rebloomer that can flower on both old and new growth, which means it has more flexibility than many bigleaf types—but it still benefits from the “prune after flowering” mindset to protect buds and keep the show strong.
Think gently, not aggressively. Remove spent blooms to encourage additional flowering, clean out dead wood once you can see what’s alive in spring, and do shaping cuts right after a bloom flush if you need them. With that approach, you get a tidy plant, reliable flowers, and none of the heartbreak that comes from pruning away the season you were waiting for.
























