TrendsCultureMeaning

Nature Baby Names: From Stars to Trees and Flowers

Names drawn from the natural world — poetic, grounded, and more varied than you think.

· 1 min read

The Rise of Nature Names

Parents today are giving their children names borrowed directly from the natural world — flowers, trees, celestial bodies, weather, elements, animals. This category has exploded in the past decade, driven by an ecological consciousness, a desire for names that feel rooted and poetic, and a broader cultural turn toward softness and meaning in naming.

Celestial and Sky Names

Luna (moon) has climbed into the top 10 in multiple countries. Aurora (dawn) evokes the Northern Lights. Orion is a striking boy's name from the constellation. Nova means "new" and also a type of star. Stella and Estella both mean "star". For more unusual picks: Cielo (sky in Spanish), Aster (Greek for star), Rigel (a star in Orion).

Plant, Tree, and Flower Names

Willow — graceful and resilient. Ivy — evergreen and tenacious. Rose, Violet, Lily, Iris, Jasmine, Camellia — floral names remain perennially popular. For boys and gender-neutral choices: Cedar, Rowan, Alder, Ash, Oak, Linden. Tree names can feel especially masculine or neutral because of the strength and height they imply.

Water, Weather, and Earth Names

River has become a top unisex choice. Ocean, Bay, Rain, and Storm are gaining ground. Wren (a bird) and Robin are bird names rising for all genders. Ember, Flora, Mira (meaning sea in some languages) round out an elemental set. Pick one element and watch how many names connect to it — nature names are a universe, not just a list.