Florence Pugh’s Flower-Adorned Hairstyle Is a Masterclass in Summer Hair Accessorizing
The actress gave us a master class in summer hair accessorizing while vacationing in Ibiza

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Florence Pugh just made the case for treating your hair like a garden — and honestly, the argument is airtight. Last week, the actress touched down in Ibiza to celebrate fashion designer Harris Reed's 30th birthday, and she arrived with a beauty arsenal that felt equal parts art installation and vacation fantasy.
According to Harper's Bazaar, hairstylist Hyungsun Ju built the look on a half-up foundation: loose waves, teased crown volume, and face-framing pieces left intentionally undone. The finishing touch? An actual bouquet — light-green lisianthus, purple clematis, and light-blue delphinium — woven in to mirror the blooms on her yellow floral silk Rodarte dress and stack of gold Bvlgari jewelry. This is not a floral clip situation. This is commitment.
The Rest of the Look Matched the Energy
Makeup artist Ciara Deroiste kept the face in conversation with the hair rather than competing with it — soft winged liner, flushed cheeks, and a cool-toned lip liner used as a contour shade, with petal-pink concentrated at the center for a blurred, just-bitten effect. It's one of the most talked-about lip techniques right now, and Pugh's version is the reference photo you're going to save and bring to your next appointment. By the time Reed's official birthday bash at The Standard Ibiza rolled around, she'd fully pivoted: shimmery sunset eyes, a wet-hair slick, and a sheer metallic lace dress from Annie's Ibiza — different vibe, same level of intention.
What's worth noting isn't just that Pugh looked good (she always does) — it's the creative logic behind both looks. The flowers weren't a quirky afterthought; they were the focal point, chosen to echo specific dress prints and color stories. The lip technique wasn't trendy for trendy's sake; it softened everything else on the face. Good vacation beauty isn't about packing your full routine — it's about one or two very considered swings.
Consider this your permission slip to skip the headband and go straight to the florist.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


