A year ago, we lost our mom to ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease). She was the kind of woman who made everyone around her feel special, and one of her favorite things in the world was a good old-fashioned tea party, especially with her grandkids.
So when the one-year mark rolled around, we knew exactly how we wanted to honor her. We didn’t want a somber gathering. We wanted laughter, pretty teacups, and all her favorite flavors. We wanted the kind of afternoon she would have loved to host herself.
My sister, my two daughters, my three granddaughters, and I gathered in my backyard on a warm, sunny afternoon and threw the tea party of her dreams.
If you’re looking for a meaningful way to celebrate someone you’ve lost, or honestly, if you just want a gorgeous excuse to gather the women in your life over scones and good conversation, this is your blueprint. Below are the exact ideas we used, why they worked so well, and how you can recreate every single one.
Setting a Table That Tells a Story
A tea party table doesn’t need to be expensive or perfectly matched to feel special. In fact, the opposite is true. Here’s how we built ours.
1. Mismatched Vintage Teacups
Over the years, I’ve collected a small army of mismatched teacups and saucers, some thrifted, some passed down from my mom’s own collection.
Why it works: No two place settings look the same, which makes every single seat feel intentional and personal instead of store-bought. Guests genuinely love sipping out of something with a little history.
How to recreate it: Start collecting now. Thrift stores, estate sales, and antique malls are goldmines for single teacups at a few dollars each. Don’t worry about matching sets. Gold rims, florals, and pastel patterns almost always look beautiful together no matter how different they are.

2. Eclectic Plates, Unified by Color
We mixed creamy blue plates with delicate scalloped edges alongside bold black-and-white French fleur-de-lis plates.
Why it works: Mixing patterns adds visual interest, but staying within one color family (here, blue, black, and white) keeps it from feeling chaotic.
How to recreate it: Pick two or three colors for your party first. Then hunt for two or three different plate patterns within that palette. The unifying color is what makes mismatched dishes look curated instead of random.

3. Lace Doily Chargers
Underneath each plate, we layered white woven lace placemats.
Why it works: This one small layer instantly makes a table feel formal and romantic without costing much at all.
How to recreate it: Look for woven lace or doily-style placemats online or at any party supply store. Slip one under every plate as a charger for an easy upgrade.

4. Floral Napkins with Berry Napkin Rings
Our napkins were a soft pink floral print, cinched with delicate white pipe-berry napkin rings.
Why it works: Napkin rings are one of the cheapest ways to add texture and color, and they tie the whole table’s color story together.
How to recreate it: Choose a floral napkin in your party’s color scheme, then wrap it with a simple ring made of faux berries, ribbon, or twine. Craft stores carry these for just a few dollars.

Heartfelt Touches That Made It a True Tribute
This is the part that turned a pretty party into something deeply meaningful. If you’re hosting a memorial tea, these touches matter more than anything on the table.
5. A Centerpiece Pulled From Her Collection
My granddaughter brought out my mom’s yellow chocolate pitcher and filled it with blue and white flowers for the centerpiece. We also used several of her favorite bowls and serving dishes throughout the spread.
Why it works: This is the single most emotional detail you can add. Literally placing her belongings at the center of the table means her presence is felt the moment anyone sits down.
How to recreate it: Choose one or two sentimental pieces that belonged to your loved one, a pitcher, a vase, a favorite bowl, and put them to actual use as your centerpiece or serving dishes. Don’t tuck them away as decoration only. Let them do their job again.

6. A Sign With Her Name On It
A little white porcelain pig that belonged to my mom held a small chalkboard sign reading “Gigi’s Tea Party.”
Why it works: It’s whimsical, instantly tells guests who the day is about, and becomes the sweetest photo prop on the table.
How to recreate it: Grab any small chalkboard sign holder (easel-style ones are inexpensive and easy to find), write the honoree’s name or nickname plus “Tea Party,” and set it near your centerpiece.

7. Tiny Bud Vases Scattered Across the Table
Instead of one big floral arrangement, we used several small glass vases filled with wildflowers, herbs, and garden clippings, scattered down the center of the table.
Why it works: It’s a budget-friendly way to spread color across a long table instead of clustering it all in one spot, and it looks effortlessly garden-fresh.
How to recreate it: Snip three to five stems per vase from your own yard or a grocery store bouquet. Use small juice glasses, bud vases, or even mason jars. Place one near every seat or cluster a few in the middle.

A Food Spread Built for Sharing
This is where the real magic happened. We mixed homemade favorites with a few smart store-bought shortcuts, and we made sure there was something for everyone, including our vegan guests.
8. Mini Cheesy Egg Puffs
My daughter Emily baked these in a mini muffin tin, and they disappeared fast.
Why it works: They’re savory, bite-sized, can be eaten with fingers between sips of tea, and can be made ahead of time.
How to recreate it: Whisk eggs with shredded cheese and your favorite mix-ins (we love chives, bacon bits, or spinach). Pour into a greased mini muffin tin and bake at 350°F for 12 to 15 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

9. Yogurt and Fruit Cups, Made Dietary-Friendly
We filled mini oatmeal cups with vanilla yogurt and topped them with a strawberry. For our vegan daughter, we swapped in vegan vanilla yogurt and topped it with blueberries instead, so everyone could easily tell which was which.
Why it works: They’re naturally pretty, easy to customize, and the different fruit toppings let guests with dietary needs grab the right one without asking.
How to recreate it: Bake mini oat cups (or use store-bought granola cups), fill with yogurt, and top with a single piece of fruit. Pick one fruit for the regular version and a different one for any allergy-friendly or vegan version.

10. A Tower of Store-Bought Macarons
We picked up a box of colorful little macarons from Costco. My mom loved all things French, so these felt like the perfect, fitting touch.
Why it works: Zero baking required, yet they deliver maximum visual wow. They also tie beautifully into a classic tea party theme.
How to recreate it: Grab a box of assorted macarons from your grocery store or bakery. Arrange them by color on a tiered stand for the prettiest possible payoff with the least amount of effort.

11. Toasted Vegan Poppyseed Muffins
My granddaughter made gorgeous vegan poppyseed muffins, then sliced and toasted them under the broiler with vegan butter.
Why it works: Toasting turns an everyday muffin into something special, with crisp golden edges that feel like a real tea party treat.
How to recreate it: Slice muffins in half, spread with vegan butter, and broil for two to three minutes until golden. Keep a close eye on them since broilers work fast.

12. Vegan Cucumber Tea Sandwiches with Edible Flowers
My vegan daughter Madeline made these gorgeous little sandwiches with homemade tofu cream cheese, fresh herbs, and cucumber, garnished with borage flowers and nasturtium leaves.
Why it works: Classic tea sandwiches get an elegant, Instagram-worthy upgrade, and the recipe is fully plant-based without sacrificing flavor or texture.
How to recreate it: Full recipe with exact ingredients and steps is below, so you can make these exactly as we did.

13. A Family Recipe, Passed Down
My sister baked my mom’s famous chocolate chip scones using her original recipe.
Why it works: Out of everything on the table, this is the detail that brings the most emotion. Tasting a recipe tied to your loved one is like having them in the room with you.
How to recreate it: Ask family members for a recipe your loved one was known for, then assign it to whoever has the handwritten card or remembers it best. If no recipe survives, ask around. Someone in the family usually has it tucked away.

14. A Fruit “Petal” Platter
We sliced apricots in half, topped each one with a cherry half and a blueberry, then arranged them in a circular pattern on a platter.
Why it works: It requires zero cooking, looks genuinely beautiful, and the natural colors fit any tea party palette.
How to recreate it: Halve and pit your apricots, top each half with a small piece of cherry and a blueberry, and fan them out on a platter for an easy showstopper side.

The Drink That Tied It All Together
15. Homemade Herbal Water Kefir
Madeline prepared a refreshing herbal water kefir for everyone to sip throughout the afternoon.
Why it works: It’s a lighter, gut-friendly alternative to soda or lemonade, and it feels special enough for a celebration without being overly sweet.
How to recreate it: Brew water kefir using your kefir grains and steep with a flavorful herbal tea of your choice. Chill thoroughly and serve from a pretty glass bottle or pitcher so it looks as good as it tastes.

The Detail That Made It Unforgettable
16. Let the Kids Help
My six-year-old granddaughter Harper made adorable little place cards and tucked them into tiny mouse-shaped place card holders. She also wrote everyone’s name on a slip of paper for each plate and helped arrange the cut flowers into one of my mom’s favorite little vases.
Why it works: Kids feel included and proud of their contribution, and their handmade touches become keepsakes that mean more than anything store-bought ever could.
How to recreate it: Hand the youngest guests some paper, markers, and a simple place card holder. Let them write names or draw a little something for each person at the table. Don’t worry about it looking polished. That’s exactly the point.
Quick hosting tip: If your party is outside and the sun starts creeping in, keep a spare blanket or sheet nearby. We draped one over our umbrella when the afternoon sun got a little too warm, and it saved the day without anyone having to move inside.

A Tea Party Worth Remembering
Hosting this tea party wasn’t just a way to honor my mom’s memory. It brought our whole family closer together for an afternoon filled with laughter, a few tears, and so many shared stories.
We all miss her every single day, but celebrating the woman she was, surrounded by her favorite things and the people she loved most, felt like exactly the right way to keep her spirit alive.
If you’re looking for a meaningful way to remember someone special, or you simply want an afternoon of pretty teacups, good food, and great company, a tea party might be exactly the gathering you need. Pick a few of these ideas, make them your own, and get ready to create an afternoon your guests will be talking about for weeks.

Vegan Cucumber Tea Sandwiches
Ingredients
Ingredients for the sandwiches:
- 1 cup vegan cream cheese (recipe below, or sub regular cream cheese)
- 3 tablespoons finely chopped parsley
- 3 tablespoons finely chopped chives
- 3 tablespoons chopped basil or fennel greens
- 1 teaspoon chopped garlic
- Sea salt, to taste
- ½ English cucumber, thinly sliced
- 8 slices soft sourdough bread, crusts removed
Ingredients for the vegan cream cheese:
- 1 (14-ounce) package firm, water-packed tofu
- ½ cup refined coconut oil
- 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
- 1 teaspoon nutritional yeast
- 1 teaspoon salt
Instructions
How to make the vegan cream cheese:
- Add all cream cheese ingredients to a high-speed blender.
- Blend until smooth and fluffy, scraping down the sides occasionally as needed.
How to assemble the sandwiches:
- Place the sliced cucumber in a bowl with a good pinch of salt, toss lightly, and let it rest for about 10 minutes while you prepare the cream cheese mixture.
- Stir the chopped herbs and garlic into the vegan cream cheese until fully combined.
- Spread the cream cheese mixture on both slices of bread for each sandwich.
- Remove the cucumbers from the bowl and pat them dry with a clean cloth.
- Layer the cucumber slices in overlapping rows on the bread, then cut each sandwich into triangles.
- Garnish with borage flowers (they taste like cucumber) and nasturtium leaves and flowers for the prettiest finishing touch.
