Queen Annes Lace Organic Seeds (Daucus carota) Classic wildflower with delicate white umbels; attracts pollinators and adds cottage-garden charm
Minimum: 100+ Seeds
Airy White Umbels • Pollinator Magnet • Timeless Cottage Garden Classic
Few flowers capture that soft, storybook feeling like Queen Anne’s Lace. When the delicate white umbels rise above feathery foliage and sway in summer light, the garden feels alive in a different way. If you love wildflower meadows, pollinator gardens, or that effortless cottage look, Queen Anne’s Lace seeds bring grace without fuss.
This is for gardeners who appreciate texture, movement, and plants that feel woven into the landscape rather than placed.
A Wildflower with Presence
Daucus carota is a hardy biennial known for its flat-topped clusters of tiny white flowers. Each bloom forms an intricate lace-like umbrella, often with a single dark floret in the center.
Plant characteristics:
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2 to 4 feet tall
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Finely divided, fern-like foliage
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Broad white flower umbels
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Blooms from early to late summer
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Self-seeding habit
The flowers dry beautifully in the field, forming sculptural seed heads that catch the light long after bloom time.
Pollinator & Ecological Value
Queen Anne’s Lace is more than ornamental. It is a powerful pollinator plant.
Attracts:
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Native bees
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Butterflies
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Beneficial wasps
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Hoverflies
In permaculture systems and vegetable gardens, those beneficial insects help manage pests naturally. If you are building a balanced garden ecosystem, Queen Anne’s Lace seeds are a simple addition with big impact.
Garden & Landscape Uses
This wildflower fits almost anywhere with sun and open soil.
Perfect for:
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Cottage gardens
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Wildflower meadows
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Naturalized borders
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Roadside-style plantings
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Cut flower gardens
It pairs beautifully with coneflowers, black-eyed Susans, and ornamental grasses. The airy blooms soften bold perennials and create that layered meadow look many gardeners chase.
How to Grow Queen Anne’s Lace at Home
One reason it remains popular is how easy it is to grow. This is one of the best flowers for beginners who want reliable results.
Growing tips:
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Direct sow in early spring or fall
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Lightly press seeds into soil, do not bury deeply
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Full sun for strongest stems
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Tolerates average to poor soil
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Space 8 to 12 inches apart
It prefers well-drained soil but adapts to a range of conditions. Once established, it handles drought well. Allow some seed heads to mature if you want it to naturalize year after year.
In a Zone 7 garden and beyond, fall sowing often produces stronger spring growth.
A Plant Rooted in History
Queen Anne’s Lace has been naturalized across North America for generations. Its wild carrot ancestry links it to cultivated carrots, and its presence in old fields and along fence lines gives it a familiar, nostalgic quality.
Gardeners have long valued it for both beauty and utility. Dried seed heads were used historically in folk arrangements and herbal traditions.
Why Grow Queen Anne’s Lace?
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Classic cottage garden flower
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Strong pollinator support
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Easy to grow from seed
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Drought tolerant once established
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Beautiful fresh and dried
If you want movement in your garden, something that catches golden evening light and hums with bees, Queen Anne’s Lace seeds deliver.
Scatter them once, and each summer you will see that soft white lace rising again, as if it has always belonged there.
