Move over fiddle leaf fig, there’s a new (old) player in town.
Pampas grass is the latest plant to take the interiors world by a storm, trending on Pinterest and popping up on Instagram accounts across the globe.

Trending in the ’70s, its stems and distinctive plumed flower heads make a dramatic style statement, towering over tables and sideboards.
Generally white, pampas grass is also available in a pale pink or delicate mauve.
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It’s widely available in florists overseas, but it’s actually a noxious weed in Australia, threatening native species and its natural environment. It’s also illegal to sell pampas grass in Australia, so you can’t buy it from your local florist.
If you love the look of pampas grass, a faux plant is a good alternative, like this one from Temple and Webster.

Otherwise you could consider fresh and native alternatives. According to Emma Flanagan from Flower Infusion in Wahroonga, you can use plants and foliage such as peatree.
“We love peatree because it’s a nice Australian flower and it has a lovely rustic feel,” she told Better Homes and Gardens.

Flanagan also suggested pierus, fennel, cotton or millet as alternatives to pampas grass.
“Millet has a similar shape to pampas grass, however you can achieve a sense of height with large bunches of fennel,” she said.
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Want to get the look of pampas grass at home? Be inspired by this round-up of Insta-worthy arrangements and theatrical installations.
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You might also like:
The one thing you should avoid doing to your fiddle-leaf fig
This is the easiest indoor plant to grow
How to rescue your fiddle leaf fig
With a first-class Honours degree in English, Rebecca Lowrey Boyd is best known as the founder of Wee Birdy (weebirdy.com), a London-based blog devoted to London shopping, design and style. It was named one of the Top 100 Blogs in the World by the Sunday Times (UK), and was listed on Times Online's Best 50 Design Blogs in the World. It has also featured in many international magazines including British Vogue, British Cosmopolitan, Australian Cosmopolitan, Inside Out, Shop Til You Drop and Home Beautiful. During her time in London, Rebecca was also Deputy Shopping & Style Editor at Time Out London. She is also the former editor of Bride to Be, Cosmopolitan Bride, Cosmopolitan Pregnancy and Cosmopolitan Hair & Beauty magazines, as well as Digital Managing Editor on bhg.com.au, an associate editor on Home Beautiful magazine, Acting Digital Managing Editor on Homes to Love and Digital Managing Editor on Gourmet Traveller. A design nerd and keen birder, she can usually be found poring over Pinterest, knee-deep in Bunnings or sticky-beaking at modernist homes in Sydney’s bushburbia.
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