Buy PureDried FlowerOnline in India - Bulk & Wholesale
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77% OFFDried Hibiscus Flower
Regular price From Rs. 179.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 179.00Sale -
75% OFFRose Petals
Regular price From Rs. 199.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 199.00Sale -
37% OFFDried Lavender Buds
Regular price From Rs. 499.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 499.00Sale -
62% OFFDried Chamomile Flower
Regular price From Rs. 299.00Regular priceUnit price / perRs. 800.00Sale price From Rs. 299.00Sale
About Dried Flower
Dried Flowers Online — Botanicals for Tea, Skincare & DIY Crafting
>The challenge with buying dried botanicals online is figuring out what "dried" actually means. Air-drying preserves volatile aromatics better than heat-based methods, but it takes longer — and not every supplier has the space or patience for it. Moisture content at time of packing matters too, particularly for stock that will sit through India's monsoon months before being used. RV Organica's range of dried flowers online includes lavender buds, hibiscus, chamomile, and rose petals, processed for food-grade and cosmetic use. The same range is available in bulk for formulators and small brands sourcing at scale.
What Are Dried Flowers?
>Dried flowers are whole or broken botanical blooms — petals, buds, or flowerheads — dehydrated to reduce moisture and stabilise the plant material for longer storage. The process sounds simple, but the variables matter considerably. Temperature during drying affects whether delicate volatile compounds (responsible for fragrance) survive intact. Light exposure during storage determines whether pigments like hibiscus anthocyanins stay vivid or fade within weeks.
What buyers often conflate with dried flowers: potpourri blends that have synthetic fragrance added post-drying, herbal powders where the flower is ground rather than preserved whole, and floral waters or hydrosols, which are liquid extracts — not dried botanicals at all.
For tea or skincare use, food-grade processing matters specifically. This means no sulphur dioxide fumigation (used commercially to extend visual shelf life) and no artificial colour fixing. The way to verify: ask for the drying method and moisture content at the time of packing. If a supplier can't answer both, that itself is informative.
Uses of Dried Flowers Online
>Dried Flowers for Herbal Tea
Lavender buds, chamomile, and hibiscus are the three most commonly used for brewing or blending into herbal infusions. Each behaves differently and suits different purposes.
Lavender buds for tea release aroma more slowly than chamomile — steeping time matters more. At 3–5 minutes with water around 85°C (not a full boil, which makes lavender bitter), you get a clean floral note without sharpness. Used alone, lavender tea is mild. Blended with chamomile, the combination shows up in relaxation-focused evening teas across Indian households more often than most buyers realise.
Hibiscus brews fast — five minutes in boiling water is enough for a deep red infusion with a tart, cranberry-adjacent flavour. It's a common summer drink across North India, often served chilled with sugar. Its anthocyanin content is one reason it gets used in skincare too, though how it behaves when consumed versus applied topically is a different matter entirely.
Chamomile brews to a mild, slightly sweet flavour. Worth noting: most clinical research on chamomile's calming properties uses concentrated extracts. Your home-brewed cup contains far lower amounts of the relevant apigenin. That doesn't make it useless, but it's worth holding realistic expectations rather than treating it as a pharmaceutical-grade sedative.
Storage note that matters in India: tea-grade dried flowers need airtight glass jars once you're past the third or fourth week of the March–October heat window. The same ambient moisture that degrades spices does the same to dried petals, often before any visible deterioration appears.
Dried Flower Petals for Skincare
The most common application is infusion — steeping dried petals in a carrier oil or distilled water over heat or time. Hibiscus dried flowers for skin work in cold-infused oils because their anthocyanins partially transfer to the carrier medium, though the concentration achieved at home is lower than commercial extraction yields. Rose petals dried for skincare infuse well into jojoba or sweet almond oil for use in face blends and body preparations.
A few practical observations. Crushing petals before infusion increases surface area and speeds extraction — a mortar works fine. But it also releases chlorophyll from some flowers, chamomile especially, which can make the oil greener and slightly bitter-smelling. Whether that's a problem depends on the formulation. For simple home use, it usually isn't. For commercial skincare, test the finished oil before committing to a batch.
The caveat that matters for anyone formulating at scale: dried petals are not a substitute for standardised plant extracts in products where a claimed active concentration needs to hold up. If you're labelling a product with a specific botanical benefit, that claim needs to be supported by the actual input quantity and some form of testing — not just "contains hibiscus" on the ingredient list.
Dried Flowers for Potpourri and Home Decor
Lavender, rose petals, and chamomile are the standard choices for home potpourri work. Lavender holds its fragrance the longest of the three because its primary aromatic compounds — linalool, linalyl acetate — are reasonably stable at room temperature. Rose petals fade faster and are often paired with a few drops of rose essential oil to maintain intensity beyond the first few weeks.
In Indian homes, dried flowers appear in contexts beyond the Western-style potpourri bowl. Rose petals are a constant in pooja rituals and festive decorations. Chamomile buds get added to wardrobe sachets. Lavender is increasingly used in linen bags as a moth deterrent — an application with reasonable evidence behind it, though the effective concentration needed is higher than most small sachets actually achieve.
For longer fragrance life in any decorative application: whole buds retain aroma better than broken petals. Keep arrangements out of direct sunlight and refresh botanicals every four to six weeks during Indian summers. A bowl left in a south-facing window through May will lose its fragrance in a week.
Dried Flower Petals for DIY Formulations
For small formulators, crafters, and brands working on bath products, herbal powders, or gifting hampers, dried botanicals serve as both functional ingredients and visual elements — and the two roles don't always line up.
In bath blends, hibiscus and rose petals add colour to the product and sometimes to the bathwater itself. Hibiscus can temporarily tint the water and skin a very light pink, which may or may not be welcome depending on the audience you're selling to. Chamomile dried flowers for wellness work well in soak blends aimed at relaxation, though — again — the active compound concentration in a full bath is low relative to what the research uses.
For bulk dried flowers India buyers specifically: moisture content below 8% at time of packing is the baseline to ask for. Anything higher shortens usable shelf life in ways that compound through a monsoon season. Uniform petal size and consistent colour across a batch indicate controlled drying and proper sorting — both things worth confirming before placing a large order, not after it arrives.
Popular Dried Flowers and Best Uses
>Dried Lavender Buds
Dried Lavender Buds do two things reliably: fragrance sachets and tea blending. The narrow purple buds hold their aroma better than most petals during storage — partly why they're the go-to for wardrobe sachets and sleep pillows across Indian homes. For tea, steep below boiling. Lavender goes bitter faster than chamomile when over-extracted, and the flavour doesn't recover.
Dried Hibiscus Flower
Among the four botanicals in this range, Dried Hibiscus Flower has the widest application spread. It brews into a vivid crimson infusion that's genuinely good served cold or hot. It infuses into oils and water with visible colour transfer. Small brands buying it for gift hampers are also discovering it makes a strong visual impact in kraft-paper packaging. The anthocyanin content that drives both the colour and skincare interest degrades under prolonged heat, so brew at 90°C or below if retention matters.
Dried Chamomile Flower
Dried Chamomile Flower is reliably mild across applications — sometimes frustratingly so. It brews to a pale straw-gold tea that most people blend with something else. For skincare infusions, chamomile in oil picks up a faint hay-like scent and a subtle colour. It remains one of the more researched botanicals for skin-calming applications, though most of that research is on German chamomile specifically, which is worth checking if botanical origin matters to your formulation or your customers.
Rose Petals
Rose Petals occupy a different category from the other three: their primary value is aesthetic and ritual rather than strongly functional. They're used in pooja trays, festive décor, gift hampers, and as a visual element in bath products. The fragrance is real but fades faster in dried form than most buyers expect. Keeping them in a sealed container helps, but if rose scent is the specific objective, pairing dried petals with a small amount of rose essential oil or absolute gives you better longevity than petals alone.
Browse all dried herbal flowers at RV Organica
How to Choose the Right Dried Flowers
>The practical decision depends on intended use.
For tea, match the flower to what you're after. Hibiscus for a tart, refreshing cold brew. Lavender for a floral evening blend. Chamomile for something mild and blendable. Food-grade matters here — botanicals for tea consumption should come without added fragrance, colour fixatives, or sulphur dioxide treatment. If you're sourcing for a food-adjacent product you intend to sell, a COA showing heavy metal testing and pesticide absence is worth requesting before committing to a supplier.
For skincare formulation, the questions to ask any supplier are moisture content and drying method. High-moisture botanicals in a cosmetic batch lead to microbial growth in water-containing formulations. For India's supply chain specifically, also confirm whether stock has passed through a monsoon season in storage — botanicals can absorb ambient moisture and begin degrading without showing visible signs until the problem is well advanced.
For bulk dried flowers India orders, three things separate a usable supplier from a frustrating one: minimum order quantities that work for your production schedule, consistent batch quality across orders, and documentation that actually reflects what you're receiving. RV Organica provides COA and MSDS with bulk orders. Ask for those before placing an order with any supplier — and check whether the COA is batch-specific or a generic document for the product line. The difference matters.
Storage for buyers across India: airtight containers, away from light and heat. A kitchen shelf above a gas burner is the worst possible location even for small quantities. Silica gel sachets inside the container meaningfully extend usable shelf life through the humid months — not a workaround, just a practical step.
About RV Organica
>RV Organica is a Panipat-based botanical supplier with a manufacturing unit in Nimbri, Haryana. Dried flowers are packed in sealed pouches from 50g retail quantities to bulk formats, with COA and MSDS documentation available for wholesale orders. Products are dispatched across India and can be arranged for international shipment through documented order processes.