Parts of a Flower Generator Parts of a Flower
Create clear, labeled parts of a flower diagrams in seconds. Show the petal, sepal, stamen, and pistil, a simple version for kids, or a blank worksheet. Free for teachers, students, and researchers.
Parts of a Flower Generator
Your parts of a flower diagram will appear here
Describe your diagram and click Generate
Parts of a Flower Diagram Examples
Browse parts of a flower diagrams made with Figviz, or generate your own above
Fully Labeled Parts of a Flower
A fully labeled parts of a flower diagram with a callout for every part, from the sepal and petal to the stamen and pistil, ideal for direct instruction and student notes.
Blank Parts of a Flower Worksheet
A blank worksheet version with empty label boxes and leader lines, ready for students to identify the petal, sepal, stamen, and pistil on their own.
Flower Parts and Their Functions
A labeled diagram that pairs each flower part with a short note on its function, helping students connect structure to what each part does.
Male and Female Flower Parts
A diagram that color-groups the male reproductive parts (the stamen) and the female reproductive parts (the pistil), so students can compare them at a glance.
Parts of a Flower for Kids
A simplified parts of a flower diagram for kids, with bright colors and large friendly labels for the petal, sepal, stamen, and pistil.
Flower Cross-Section
A cut-away cross-section of a single flower that opens up the pistil to show the stigma, style, ovary, and ovules inside, useful for teaching how seeds form.
What are the parts of a flower?
The parts of a flower are the structures a flowering plant uses to attract pollinators and make seeds. A typical flower has four main sets of parts: the petals, the sepals, the stamen, and the pistil, all sitting on top of a small base called the receptacle and held up by a stalk or peduncle. The petals are the colorful parts that draw in bees and butterflies, and the sepals are the small leaf-like parts that protect the bud before it opens. The stamen is the male part, and the pistil, sometimes called the carpel, is the female part. A parts of a flower diagram shows all of these structures as a labeled drawing of a single flower, so students can see how each part fits together. This generator turns a short description into a clean, labeled diagram so you can skip the drawing and go straight to teaching. If you need the technical schematic version instead, the floral diagram generator builds floral diagrams and floral formulas.
The parts of a flower and their functions
Male and female reproductive parts of a flower
The reproductive parts of a flower split into a male set and a female set. The male part is the stamen, which is made of two pieces: the anther, where pollen is produced, and the filament, the thin stalk that holds the anther up so pollen can be picked up by wind or pollinators. The female part is the pistil, also called the carpel, and it has three pieces: the stigma at the top, which is sticky and catches pollen, the style, a slender tube that pollen travels down, and the ovary at the base, which holds the ovules that become seeds after fertilization. A flower that has both a stamen and a pistil is called a perfect flower. Color-grouping the male parts in one color and the female parts in another makes it easy for students to compare the two sets side by side.
How to make a parts of a flower diagram
Classroom uses for flower lessons
Frequently asked questions
Related biology tools
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