About this design
Where the Wildflower style comes from, and what it signals.
Wildflower is built to feel hand-gathered rather than manufactured. The background is a warm cream #F6F3E9, cards sit on a lighter cream #FCFAF3 behind hairline #E3DECB rules, and the whole deck reads like a flower-press notebook: pretty, natural and a little imperfect on purpose. The signature is a set of hand-drawn line botanicals, sprigs, single wildflower stems, trailing leaves and a curving vine, all built from loose inline SVG strokes in sage #7C8450 so nothing looks like clipart or a stock image.
The type pairing carries the warmth. Headings are set in the classic book serif EB Garamond in deep olive ink #46492F, body and labels in the humanist sans Karla in soft brown #5E5A48, with small sage kickers in wide-tracked uppercase. Color stays disciplined: sage leads every flower, vine and rule, while terracotta #C27A4E and butter #D9B45B show up only in pinprick doses, a petal center here, a small node there, and clay #A6896B handles the quietest dividers. The result is calm and earthy without tipping into twee.
It suits small-business and lifestyle storytelling: a seasonal flower farm or CSA, a maker or bakery, a wellness or garden brand, a wedding or workshop. Across cover, intro, offerings, harvest numbers, a seasonal vine timeline and a closing wreath, one loose floral grammar holds the deck together so it feels gathered by one pair of hands.
Use it for
- Small-business and craft-brand decks with a warm, handmade identity
- Flower farms, CSAs, florists, bakeries and other lifestyle makers
- Wedding, workshop and event proposals that want a soft natural mood
- Wellness, garden and slow-living brand storytelling
- Community, education or nonprofit decks that should feel inviting
Skip it for
- Dense data rooms with big tables and multi-series dashboards
- Dark, high-energy tech or product launch decks
- Strict corporate or financial reporting that needs a neutral grid
The presentation design prompt
This is the exact text that gets sent to your AI.
Design slides in the 'Wildflower' theme: a warm, hand-gathered cottagecore look, the feeling of a flower-press notebook left open on a kitchen table. Background: warm cream #F6F3E9 on every slide, with cards and panels in lighter cream #FCFAF3 behind thin 1px #E3DECB hairlines, square or barely-rounded corners, never heavy frames. Typography: headings and display lines in the classic book serif 'EB Garamond' in deep olive ink #46492F, body and labels in the humanist sans 'Karla' in soft brown #5E5A48, small captions and meta in muted taupe #9A957E; small uppercase kickers set in sage #7C8450 with wide tracking around 0.22em; both 'EB Garamond' and 'Karla' are Google Fonts. Signature motif: hand-drawn line botanicals built only from inline SVG strokes at roughly 1.5px in sage #7C8450, loose and a little uneven so they read as drawn by hand, never as a clinical pressed-botanical plate; use sprigs and single wildflower stems with five or six rounded petals and a small center, trailing leaves and buds, and a curving vine that can connect points across a slide; flowers may carry the smallest hand-filled center in butter #D9B45B or terracotta #C27A4E. Accent discipline: sage #7C8450 is the lead, used for kickers, vines, leaf strokes, rules and one or two filled chips; terracotta #C27A4E and butter #D9B45B appear only in pinprick doses as a petal center, a tiny node, a single underline; clay #A6896B is the quietest tone for occasional dividers; the four chart colors are sage, terracotta, butter and clay. Keep panels filled with soft sage-cream #E6E8D2 or surface cream, keep the air generous and the line work loose and warm. Strictly avoid: stock or real photos, clipart and emoji, drop shadows, glows or neon, a second loud accent fighting the sage, dense bullet lists, heavy borders, and stiff symmetrical pressed-botanical diagrams that lose the hand-drawn warmth. Use this theme for my slides. Ask me what the presentation is about first, then apply the theme to every slide.View this prompt and its data on GitHub
How to use this prompt
From copied text to a finished Wildflower deck in four moves.
- 01
Copy the prompt
Use the copy button, or open it pre-filled in Claude or ChatGPT with one click from the panel on this page.
- 02
Tell the AI your topic
The prompt instructs the AI to ask what your presentation is about first. A sentence or a pasted outline is enough.
- 03
Generate and iterate
Ask for more slides or swap a layout. The avoid list at the end of the prompt keeps Wildflower on-style while the content changes.
- 04
Or skip straight to a deck
SlideSpeak turns your topic or document into a finished Wildflower presentation, exportable as PowerPoint or PDF.
Common questions
Working with the Wildflower presentation design prompt in practice.