20 Rustic Farmhouse Easter Table Centerpieces
Your Easter table deserves more than a basket of plastic eggs shoved in the center. This year, let’s actually make it feel special.
Rustic farmhouse style is a perfect match for Easter because it already leans into natural textures, earthy tones, and simple beauty. Think burlap, wood, moss, galvanized metal, and fresh spring blooms all coming together in the most effortless way.
Whether you’re hosting a big family brunch or just want your dining room to feel festive for the week, these 20 centerpiece ideas have something for every style and budget. Some take five minutes, some take a little more effort, but every single one is worth it.
1. Burlap Table Runner With Moss And Eggs Centerpiece

This one is a classic for a reason. A burlap runner instantly brings that cozy, textured farmhouse feel to your table without any fuss.
Layer some fresh or faux moss on top, scatter a mix of natural and pastel-dyed eggs throughout, and you have a centerpiece that runs the whole length of your table and looks completely put together.
It’s one of those setups that feels intentional and beautiful but honestly takes about 10 minutes to pull off.
- Use real moss for a lush, organic look or go with preserved moss if you want it to last through the whole season
- Mix egg sizes for a more natural, collected feel rather than uniform rows
- Add a few small white pillar candles along the runner to bring in extra warmth
2. Mason Jar Floral Arrangements Wrapped With Twine Or Burlap

Mason jars are one of the most versatile things you can keep in your decor toolkit. Wrap them in jute twine or a strip of burlap and they instantly turn into charming little farmhouse vases.
Fill them with whatever is blooming near you. Tulips, wildflowers, baby’s breath, or even grocery store daisies all work beautifully here.
Line three or five jars down the center of your table for a relaxed, collected look that feels effortless but styled.
- Odd numbers always look better than even when grouping jars together
- Vary the heights by using different jar sizes or placing a small wood riser under one
- Tuck in a sprig of eucalyptus or a few fern leaves for a soft green accent
3. Galvanized Metal Bucket With Spring Blooms

There is something about a galvanized metal bucket that just feels like springtime on a farm. It is rustic, a little worn, and completely charming.
Fill it generously with a mix of spring blooms like tulips, ranunculus, or daffodils. Do not overthink the arrangement, just let the flowers spill out naturally and look a little wild.
Set it slightly off-center on your table and surround the base with a few eggs or a bit of trailing greenery to ground the whole look.
| Metal Finish | Vibe | Best Paired With |
| Galvanized Silver | Classic farmhouse | White blooms and greenery |
| Aged Copper | Warm and vintage | Peach or blush florals |
| Matte Black | Modern farmhouse | Bold spring colors |
| Weathered White | Cottage charm | Soft pastels and wildflowers |
4. Wicker Basket Filled With Dyed Or Painted Eggs

A wicker basket is one of those Easter staples that never really goes out of style, especially in a farmhouse setting.
The key is in how you fill it. Skip the plastic grass and go with real moss, dried lavender, or a piece of soft linen fabric as your base instead. It makes such a difference.
Nestle in a mix of hand-dyed eggs, naturally marbled eggs, or eggs painted in muted earthy tones. The more textured and varied, the better it looks.
- Mix shell finishes by combining matte, speckled, and glossy eggs together for a gathered, organic feel
- Add a small ceramic bunny or a ribbon of dried wildflowers tucked into the side of the basket
- A little greenery spilling over the edge makes it look full and abundant without being overdone
5. Soft Pastel Candles In Rustic Wooden Holders

Candles do something magical to a table. They soften everything and make even a simple setup feel warm and a little special.
Choose pillar candles in soft Easter shades like dusty lavender, sage green, blush pink, or creamy yellow and set them in raw or lightly distressed wooden holders for that farmhouse contrast.
Group them in odd numbers and vary the heights. Surround the base with a few sprigs of greenery or scattered eggs to tie in the Easter theme without overdoing it.
- Unscented candles are always better for a dining table so they do not compete with the food
- Wooden holders with a natural or lightly washed finish work best against pastel tones
- Add a small ring of dried flowers or a little moss around each holder base for extra texture
6. Vintage Farmhouse Pitcher With Fresh Tulips Or Daisies

An old ceramic or enamel pitcher filled with fresh tulips might honestly be the most beautiful and simple Easter centerpiece you can put together.
Look for pitchers at thrift stores, flea markets, or antique shops. Chippy paint, a small crack, or a worn finish just adds more character and charm to the whole piece.
Tulips are especially lovely because they keep opening and shifting over a few days, so your centerpiece almost changes on its own throughout the week. White daisies work just as well if you want a brighter, more cheerful look.
7. Wood Slice Base With Candles And Florals

A thick wood slice makes the most beautiful natural base for a centerpiece. It grounds everything and adds instant warmth without any effort at all.
Place a grouping of candles in different heights in the center, then tuck small bunches of wildflowers, ferns, or fresh herbs around the edges. Scatter a few eggs between the florals and the whole thing looks magazine-worthy.
| Wood Slice Style | Best Use | Pairs Well With |
| Raw Edge | Nature-forward looks | Wildflowers and greenery |
| Lightly Sanded | Clean farmhouse style | Pastel florals and white candles |
| Burned or Charred | Moody, dramatic table | Deep greens and rich blooms |
| Painted White | Coastal farmhouse feel | Soft pastels and linen accents |
8. Distressed Wooden Egg Crate Filled With Moss And Eggs

An old egg crate or a weathered wooden box divided into compartments is such a charming Easter centerpiece base. It looks like it came straight off a working farm, in the best possible way.
Fill each little section with a mix of moss and eggs. Dyed eggs, speckled eggs, or small wooden egg decorations all work wonderfully here.
This is a great choice for a longer table because the compartments give it a neat, organized look while still feeling relaxed and natural.
- Let a little moss overflow out of the sections for a more organic, gathered feel
- Add tiny paper flags or short lengths of twine tied around a few eggs for a personal touch
- Mixing egg sizes and finishes within the compartments keeps it looking interesting
9. Wooden Tray With Greenery, Faux Carrots, And Small Bunnies

A wooden tray lets you build a little scene right on your table. Think of it as a tiny Easter vignette that has real personality.
Start with a layer of greenery, fresh or faux both work great, then add a few faux carrots, small ceramic or resin bunnies, and maybe a moss-covered egg or two. It comes together quickly and looks so intentional.
This one is also really easy to swap out pieces on as the season goes on, which makes it great if you like to refresh your decor throughout the month.
10. Pastel-Painted Eggs Nestled In Dried Eucalyptus Or Greenery

Dried eucalyptus has that soft, silvery-green color that pairs perfectly with pastel Easter eggs. Together they look effortlessly beautiful without needing anything else.
Lay a loose bundle of dried eucalyptus flat on your table or in a shallow tray and nestle pastel-painted eggs right into the leaves. It is simple, fragrant, and genuinely stunning.
- Paint eggs in chalky, muted tones rather than bright primary colors for a more farmhouse-appropriate look
- Speckled eggs made by flicking paint with a brush look especially gorgeous against eucalyptus
- You can use fresh or dried eucalyptus here, dried lasts longer and still smells lovely
11. Birdhouse Centerpiece With Eggs And Foliage

A small wooden birdhouse tucked into a nest of greenery and eggs is one of those centerpieces that feels completely unique and a little unexpected.
Place the birdhouse on a wood slice or inside a shallow tray and surround it with faux or fresh foliage, a few eggs, and maybe some tiny wildflowers peeking through the leaves.
It brings in that early spring feeling of new life and nesting in the most literal and lovely way.
- Weathered or painted-white birdhouses work best for a farmhouse look
- Look for miniature birdhouses at craft stores if you want something more table-scale
- Add a small bird figurine perched nearby to complete the scene
12. Dark Wood Riser With Candles And Vintage Accents

Dark wood risers add so much depth to a table that usually skews lighter and softer for Easter. The contrast is what makes it interesting.
Style the riser with a mix of cream or ivory pillar candles, a small vintage frame, dried botanicals, and a few eggs tucked in between. It feels collected and intentional rather than themed or seasonal.
This is a great option if you love farmhouse style but prefer a moodier, more sophisticated version of it.
| Riser Finish | Table Mood | Works Best With |
| Dark Walnut | Rich and moody | Cream candles, dried botanicals |
| Raw Birch | Airy and natural | Wildflowers and soft pastels |
| Whitewashed | Bright farmhouse | Colorful spring blooms |
| Black Painted | Dramatic contrast | White flowers and greenery |
13. Rustic Stone Bunny With Ivy And Faux Carrots

A stone or concrete bunny figurine has so much more presence than a typical ceramic one. It feels weighty, grounded, and genuinely rustic.
Surround it with trailing ivy, a few faux carrots, and some scattered eggs. The ivy softens the heaviness of the stone and makes the whole arrangement feel alive and lush.
This works beautifully as a single statement piece at the center of a round table or as an anchor point in a longer spread.
14. Moss Bunny Meadow Display On A Wood Tray

This is one of those centerpieces that makes people stop and say something when they walk in the room. A moss-covered bunny sitting in a little meadow of greenery on a wood tray is just completely irresistible.
Build out the scene with layers of sheet moss, small faux or dried wildflowers, tiny mushrooms, and a few eggs nestled in the grass. The more layered and textured it is, the better it looks.
- Sheet moss from a craft store is the easiest base to work with here
- Mini mushroom picks and faux butterfly accents add a whimsical touch without going overboard
- Keep the wood tray simple and natural so it does not compete with the display on top
15. Tiered Wooden Risers With Pastel Eggs And Wildflowers

Tiered risers give you so much to work with because you can style each level differently and create real visual depth on your table.
Use the top tier for a small bud vase or a cluster of pastel eggs, the middle for a mix of greenery and candles, and the base level for a wider arrangement of wildflowers or a trailing garland.
It is one of the more styled-looking centerpieces on this list but it is easier to put together than it looks, especially if you work with a simple color palette.
- Stick to two or three colors across the whole arrangement so it feels cohesive rather than busy
- Vary the textures across each level, mix smooth eggs with rough wood, soft petals with stiff greenery
- Wooden risers with a natural or lightly distressed finish complement spring blooms the most
16. Galvanized Watering Can Filled With Wild Daisies And Greens

A galvanized watering can filled with wild daisies and loose greenery is just the most cheerful thing you can put on an Easter table.
Let the flowers overflow the top and trail down the sides a little. It should look abundant and a little undone, like you just walked in from the garden.
Place it on a burlap square or a small wood board to give it a proper base and keep it from looking like it was just dropped on the table.
17. Distressed Chalkboard Easter Sign With Floral Accents

A chalkboard sign adds a personal, handmade touch to your Easter table that nothing else really replicates. Write a simple phrase like “Happy Easter” or “He Is Risen” in your own handwriting and it immediately feels genuine and warm.
Prop the sign against a stack of books or a small easel and tuck fresh or dried florals around the frame. Even a simple sprig of eucalyptus on each side makes a big difference.
The distressed or chippy frame finish is what gives it that true farmhouse character, so look for something with a worn wood or aged paint look rather than something too polished.
- White chalk ink pens give you more control than chalk sticks and look cleaner
- Add a few small pressed flowers or leaves to the corners of the sign for extra detail
- Lean it slightly rather than standing it straight up for a more relaxed, styled look
18. Farmhouse Egg Tree Branches In A Rustic Jug

Egg trees are such a beautiful and underrated Easter tradition. Bare branches hung with painted or dyed eggs in a rustic jug make a centerpiece that feels both minimal and really special.
Use dried twigs, birch branches, or any bare branches with interesting shapes. Place them in a heavy ceramic jug or an old stone crock to keep them upright and stable.
Hang the eggs with thin twine, ribbon, or thin wire and let them dangle at different lengths for the most elegant effect.
- Blown-out real eggs are the most beautiful but fragile, wooden or papier-mache eggs hold up much better
- Muted tones like sage, blush, cream, and terracotta look far more sophisticated than bright primary colors
- A few dried flowers or small feathers hung between the eggs add lovely texture
19. Farm Fresh Egg Garland Intertwined Through Center Decor

An egg garland woven through the center of your table decor is one of those small touches that makes the whole setup feel more cohesive and intentional.
String small wooden or plastic eggs onto jute twine and weave it loosely through candles, greenery, mason jars, or whatever else you have running down the center of your table. It ties everything together in the most natural way.
This works especially well on longer tables where you want the centerpiece to feel connected from end to end rather than just concentrated in the middle.
- Wooden eggs in natural or lightly painted tones look far more farmhouse than shiny plastic ones
- Leave some slack in the garland so it curves gently rather than lying flat and stiff
- Tuck small sprigs of greenery or dried flowers between the eggs as you weave it through
20. Wood Box With Hydrangeas, Tulips, And Natural Greenery

A wooden box overflowing with hydrangeas, tulips, and loose greenery is honestly one of the most lush and beautiful ways to end this list.
The box shape gives it a structured, contained look while the flowers themselves add all the softness and abundance you could want. It is that perfect balance of rustic and romantic that farmhouse style does so well.
Use a raw, slatted wood box or a crate for the most authentic look and fill it generously so the blooms spill slightly over the edges on all sides.
- Combine at least two bloom types for the most interesting arrangement, hydrangeas and tulips together are especially beautiful
- Add trailing greenery like ivy, fern fronds, or eucalyptus to soften the edges of the box
- A single ribbon of natural linen tied around the outside of the box adds a lovely finishing touch
Now that you have 20 ideas to work with, which of these would you actually put on your table this Easter, and do you think farmhouse style and spring pastels are always a perfect match or does that combination sometimes feel overdone?
