About CCFC
Philadelphia’s Source for Locally Grown Wholesale Flowers
Rooted in Chester County, we bring together trusted farms to provide seasonal, high-quality blooms with consistency, care, and ease.
Growing exceptional flowers with integrity, seasonality, and a deep respect for place
The Chester County Flower Collective was founded to showcase what this land does best—grow exceptional flowers with integrity, seasonality, and a deep respect for place.
Rooted in Chester County, the Collective brings together independent farms—Hickory Grove Gardens, Flores Temporis, Foxfield Flowers, Liberty Plants, and Pasture Song Farm—each committed to sustainable practices, distinctive varieties, and honoring the natural rhythm of the seasons.
Rather than sourcing blooms from thousands of miles away, this Collective champions flowers grown close to home, harvested at their peak, and handled with care from field to design bench. Every stem carries the character of the soil it was grown in and the hands that tended it.
The Collective exists to strengthen local agriculture, deepen community connections, and provide florals that feel intentional, grounded, and alive. Supplying designers, events, and wholesale partners, the priority is always quality over quantity and collaboration over competition.
At its core, the Chester County Flower Collective honors the land, elevates its growers, and redefines what beautiful flowers can look like when they’re grown with purpose. And in the end, the goal is simple: to bring a little more beauty into the world—honestly, thoughtfully, and close to home.
We all share a common goal
Redefining the floral industry with local flowers
Though all 6 of us come from varying backgrounds, we started growing flowers for the same reasons:
To bring joy to those around us through flowers.
To work outside with a deep respect for the land that supports us
To support our customers by growing flowers that are unique and hard to find at a traditional wholesaler
The People behind CCFC
We are 6 women who share the same passions and values.
Established in 2026, the growers behind Chester County Flower Collective joined together to find a better way to sell our flowers. All participating farms offer cut flower bunches, with each farm contributing both unique crops and select overlapping products. This balance allows CCFC to provide consistent availability while offering a diverse and complementary product mix tailored to florists needs.
Values matter when it comes to flowers!
Our Values:
Meet our Team:
CCFC is made up of 5 farmers and 1 dedicated (retired farmer) Director
Hickory Grove Gardens
Julia Bull farms 5 acres of flowers in Chester County. She has been growing flowers for nearly a decade, and has years of experience selling wholesale, high quality stems. Julia loves to “grow it all,” but specializes in Spring and Fall production. Julia’s farm has 8 unheated high tunnels to help with season extension. She focuses mostly on growing annuals, and moving a high volume of flowers. Julia uses organic growing practices, as her property is attached to her partner’s organic dairy farm. When she’s not farming, you can find her making terrible jokes, playing with her daughter, or cuddling her dogs!
Hickory Grove Gardens hosts the Chester County Flower Collective. Julia is looking forward to seeing all the designers and florists who stop by this season!
Hub Director
The Chester County Flower Collective is led by Hub Director Amanda, whose path to flowers took the scenic route—and came back smarter. She spent fifteen years running her family’s historic restaurant and events business, juggling logistics, people, and demanding customers well before the doors even opened. Earlier, she spent a decade in NYC with top magazines and brands, learning how good stories—and good design—actually get noticed.
In 2011, Amanda launched Seven Stems Flowers as a floral design studio. By 2018, it had grown into a working flower farm (because when those Café au Laits come in shriveled, you just have to grow them yourself!), supplying specialty blooms to her own studio, retail, and wholesale customers. After retiring muddy boots in 2024, she shifted her focus to supporting growers and florists—realizing a vision she and Julia Bull had dreamed up for years.
Today, she brings a farmer’s grit, a designer’s eye, and an operator’s brain—making local flowers easier to source, better to work with, and impossible to ignore.
Liberty Plants
Liberty Plants is a specialty cut flower farm located in Trappe, Pennsylvania, focusing on unique perennials, seasonal blooms, and foliage for florists and farmers market customers.
Founded in 2016, the farm began as a backyard venture growing heirloom vegetable starts and has grown into a thriving one-acre operation. Built with sustainability and work-life balance at its core, Liberty Plants grows flowers thoughtfully, harvests at peak quality, and celebrates the natural rhythm of the seasons.
Flores Temporis
Flores Temporis is a small-scale flower farm located in Quakertown, PA. Owner SeJean Tuma’s curiosity and love of learning pivoted from academia and hospital-based research to a new direction after the birth of her son, with whom she discovered a passion for gardening, flowers and environmentally conscious practices. Now entering its 9th year, Flores Temporis offers a curated selection of sustainably grown florist favorites, but her real jam is in the unusual and the uncommon. Sejean specializes in garden roses, fritillaria, exclusive varieties of peonies and dahlias, bearded iris, and floral treasures specifically for events.
Pasture Song Farm
Clara Osborne and her husband Jeremy Dunphy own and operate Pasture Song Farm, a small family farm specializing in livestock and cut flowers. Clara focuses on the flower side of the farm, growing cut flowers since 2017. She grows a wide variety of flowers using organic methods, for both retail and wholesale, with some customer favorites including ranunculus, anemones, colibri poppies, and dahlias.
Clara has been obsessed with all things farming since college, when she transferred to Warren Wilson College to study sustainable agriculture and work on the college livestock farm. For the past 15 plus years she has worked on a variety of farms, from dairies to greenhouse nurseries, eventually starting her own farm with her husband in 2016. They are currently moving their farm from south Pottstown to Boyertown, on a property they hope will have more permanence.ural rhythm of the seasons.
Foxfield Flowers
Foxfield Flowers is located on Foxfield Farm in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. We specialize in locally produced, organically grown flowers. In accordance with the slow flower movement, we like to take things slowly. What does this mean? Our flowers are grown from seed or bulb slowly, intentionally, and sustainably.
With 2 greenhouses and 2 acres of land dedicated solely to growing our flowers and produce, we are able to be conscious of every part of our relationship with the land.
Foxfield Flowers aims to provide beautiful, organic, locally grown flowers and floral arrangements to the wider community while providing social and job training opportunities to young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. We are a division of the non-profit organization, The Camphill School.
Connect with Us
Have any questions? We’d love to hear from you.
Fill out this form if you have any questions, or just want to reach out and say “hi!”. We have a dedicated director who works Part Time, so expect a response within 3–4 business days.
* is a required field