🌼 Blossom
Also known as: Blossoming Flower, Daisy, Yellow Flower
Description
A flower that has blossomed. Depicted as a flower with white or yellow petals, as a daisy, with a golden center. Commonly used for Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, and other special occasions. May be more generally used to convey such ideas as love, appreciation, and happiness. Also used as a yellow or white accent color. Not to be confused with 🌻 Sunflower or 🌸 Cherry Blossom, though their applications may overlap. Google's flower was once pink. Microsoft's was previously yellow, Samsung's white.
Image Variants

3D
Color
Flat
High Contrast
Version Information
Keywords
Shortcodes
Platform | Shortcode | Action |
---|---|---|
Emojipedia | :blossom: | |
GitHub | :blossom: | |
Slack | :blossom: | |
Discord | :blossom: |
Additional Information
A blossoming flower. Similar to the cherry blossom, but not necessarily the same shade. Blossom is also the name of a popular TV Show in the http://emojipedia.org/blossom/
- The reproductive structure of angiosperm plants, consisting of stamens and carpels surrounded by petals and sepals all borne on the receptacle.
- A flower lacking sepals, petals, stamens, or carpels.
- Flowers, sometimes known as blooms or blossoms, are the reproductive structures found in flowering plants.
- A flower, sometimes known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproductive structure found in flowering plants.
- Structure found in some plants (division Magnoliophyta / angiosperms) to support reproduction
- A plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms
- Any plant of the genus Helianthus having large flower heads with dark disk florets and showy yellow rays
- A genus of plants that includes Helianthus annuus
- A genus of plants, including the Sunflower
- Sunflowers are an annual plant native to the Americas that possess a large inflorescence.
- The commonly cultivated species, Helianthus annuus, a native of America.
- Helianthus or sunflowers L. is a genus of plants comprising about 70 species in the family Asteraceae, all of which are native to North America except three species in South America.