Cottage garden ideas to create a charming outdoor space

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Country-inspired gardens are one of the most popular and pretty landscape design styles out there. Using cottage garden ideas allows you to achieve that rural vibe whatever size or shape your space is.

The thoughtful planting and traditional-inspired structures means these gardens bring the country style even if you’re based in the city. As long as you include some key elements, like a relaxed planting style with a wildlife-friendly feel, you can turn your terraced courtyard into a cottagecore garden.

What is cottage garden style?

The secret of cottage-style planting is that it is not too contrived. Don’t have plants neatly graded from short at the front to neat at the back, but mix them up to achieve a more organic look. Keep in mind, however, that there is usually a formal framework of hedges or stone terraces behind all that charming disarray. Pollinating insects and birds also love cottage gardens too, making this style of garden a haven for wildlife.

‘Whether you have flower beds and borders to fill, a patio to update with containers or a front garden to refresh, this timeless look will add beautiful colour to enjoy year after year,’ says Marcus Eyles, Horitcultural Director at Dobbies. ‘A classic cottage garden is filled with pastel shades, roses, foxgloves and delphiniums to name a few. Loved by bees and butterflies, your garden will be brought to life with the gentle sound of buzzing and humming – a joyous backdrop to soak up summer sunshine in.’

Cottage garden ideas

The planting style is relaxed, creating a rich tapestry of colour from flowers and plants, including annuals and cut flowers. Best of all, there are no real rules to cottage garden ideas – you can grow what you love to create a garden that’s uniquely yours.

1. Cover your home with wisteria

Image credit: Future PLC/David Giles

Add fragrance and colour to your home by encouraging wisteria to climb over the facade. The pretty blossoms will bloom in May and June, offering a swathe of delicate purple flowers.

The vines grow in a winding, twisting pattern, offering that relaxed feel that speaks to cottage garden ideas, meaning even the bare branches will still add interest.

2. Upcycle farmyard items

Image credit: Future PLC/Tim Young

Take literal inspiration from the countryside by finding and upcycling old farmyard items. Water troughs on legs make excellent potting area or miniature herb gardens, which will fit in even the most petite of gardens.

Low to the ground cattle troughs can be used as individual flowers beds, or to form a flowering border. Galvanised metal milk churns are also practically tailor made for turning into pretty planters. When choosing what to use, think of what a cottage owner may have inherited from the previous owner or farmer next door would have given away.

3. Create a wild border

Image credit: Future PLC/Polly Eltes

The relaxed and wild style of cottage garden ideas works beautifully in large grassy fields, but smaller gardens can benefit from this planting style, too. If you’re looking for small garden ideas or you simply want to add interest or delineate between garden zones, a flower bed can form a natural border.

Plant varying heights, colours and textures to achieve that wildflower feel. Make sure to include some herbs or lavender to ensure a delightful fragrance.

4. Utilise every area

Image credit: Future PLC/Polly Eltes

Country style gardens are often abundant, featuring new planting and surprises at every turn. View every available area as an opportunity to add depth, colour or texture. Start with the lawn and add in borders, flower beds and even statement trees and shrubbery in the centre. Cover the exterior of the home with climbers and window boxed and load up any patio space with potted plants.

5. Add in raised beds

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

An excellent way to include wildflowers in small spaces is to limit them to raised beds. Make this work in an urban location by choosing a bed make from natural woods and then layer up various plants, flowers and grasses. Be aware that they will bloom at different times, and grow out and well as up, so start with fewer and add in more once you’ve seen the bed through a season.

Raised wildflower beds are also great in larger gardens, especially situated near vegetable plots to encourage pollinators.

6. Include a summerhouse

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

You’ll want somewhere in your outdoor space to admire all your hard work. Or simply to sit and enjoy a G&T at the end of a long summer’s day. Traditional summer house ideas can perfectly reflect the cottage garden vibe.

Stick to woods for that natural touch, but feel free to paint in pretty colours to either help the structure blend in or to pick up on the shades of your favourite flowers.

7. Look to natural materials

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

No rural inspired garden would be complete without using plenty of natural materials. Wherever possible, replace more contemporary surfaces with rustic options. This could include wooden steps, using railway sleepers as garden borders or changing sleek stone areas with pebbles.

8. Grow relaxed styles of plants and trees

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

Take the relaxed style further than just how and where you plant. Make sure you consider this in what you plant as well. Romantic, draping choices such as willow trees add that whimsical feel of cottage garden ideas, while ferns and long grasses offer the wild aspect seen in rural forests and meadows.

9. Create a colour scheme

Image credit: Natural Design Studio

‘Pick a colour scheme, a warm or cool palette can help to give the garden definition’ advises Phoebe Aubury at Natural Design Studio. ‘Limiting the amount of colours and using colour theory such as complimentary colours can help to avoid clashing and keep it looking harmonious rather than messy.’

10. Grow foxgloves

image credit: Future PLC/Annaick Guitteny

‘With their spires of bell-shaped flowers much loved by bees, foxgloves are a cottage garden favourite’ explains Marcus from Dobbies. ‘Available in creams, pinks and lavenders, they help brighten shady spots and are great planted with Hostas and Ferns.’

These purposeful blooms can be grown in any sized garden plot, even in containers on a small balcony.

11. Let grasses grow

Image credit: Yeo Valley Organic Garden

Mowing the lawn is no longer in favour – leave grasses and those with seed heads uncut to help support wildlife.

‘If you only do one thing this year to improve your garden’s value for nature, be more like Monty and cut your grass less, or not at all,’ says Sarah Mead, creator of the Yeo Valley Organic Garden in Somerset.

Sarah continues, ‘Global biodiversity is in decline and our climate is warming. It’s essential that we all recognise the small changes we can make that have a huge collective impact on our environment. Putting your feet up instead of getting the mower out is top of the list!’

12. Grow a wildflower meadow

Image credIt: Future PLC/Jon Day

‘Where a cottage is set in a beautiful countryside location, it can be an opportunity to create a space which reflects this backdrop,’ explains James Scott, of The Garden Company.

‘A wildflower meadow is a great way to achieve this, even if there is just space for a miniature version. Meadows do take perseverance and several years to establish; however, once achieved they are relatively low maintenance and require just 1 cut per year.’

13. Welcome wildlife

Image credit: Future PLC/Jon Day

Cottage gardens are ideal for attracting wildlife. Aside from the planting you can encourage wildlife to take up refuge in your garden with the simple addition of bird boxes and insect houses.

Not only are they welcoming for wildlife they help to add a charming decorative touch to the garden decor too.

14. Encourage rambling roses

Image credit: Amateur Gardening

More vigorous than climbing roses, rambling roses grow in a more wild, untidy fashion, and will happily develop into a larger bush, hedge or tree. Climbing roses have a permanent framework of stems that produce flowering side shoots each year. To promote greater flowering, the framework stems should be trained by tying them to wire supports as close to horizontal as possible.

Roses are divided into categories according to their growing and flowering habits. The main groups are large-flowered bush roses (hybrid teas), cluster-flowered bush roses (floribundas), shrub roses, climbers and ramblers.

15. Respond to the setting

Image credit: Natural Design Studio

‘Look for inspiration in the surroundings of the garden’ advises Phoebe from Natural Design Studio. ‘The landscape around the garden will give you plenty of clues as to which materials are best suited to the setting. Using the local stone or brick type can help to tie a garden into its setting.’

16. Consider your hedges and perennials

Image credit: Future PLC/Mark Bolton

For a classic cottage garden feel chose planting that will deliver. Select classic evergreens such as cypress, holly, box, copper beech or yew. Opt for classic perennials such as foxgloves, bellflowers, daylilies, delphinium and lavender – these will all offer a nice foliage in combination with roses.

17. Set the scene with stone walls

Image credit: Future PLC/Matt Cant

Choose hard landscaping that feels authentic to a rural countryside garden, by taking inspiration from Cotswold stone walls. Accentuate the cottage garden feel by growing vines, red roses, and topiary plants. Add a rustic garden bench made of wood or metal to further enhance the cottage-style vibes.

18. Lay winding pathways

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

A key design element for cottage gardens is the freedom of form; the layout is encouraged to be less structured and strict than a perfectly manicured, contemporary garden design.

A gravel path that gentle winds its way within the garden helps to keep the look light and unrestrictive. Draw up plans to decide on where to place your paths, as well as the materials that you will use to construct them, factoring in your budget for garden landscaping costs. Allow each square to represent a foot of space.

19. Appeal to the senses with aromatic planting

Image credit: Nina Baxter Garden Designs

This thoughtful garden design has created a romantic, traditional cottage garden which feels as if it has been there for years.

‘Rather than using traditional box hedging I specified Myrtus ‘Tarentina’,’ says garden designer Nina Baxter. ‘The garden is very sheltered and doesn’t suffer from hard frosts so I knew this would be ok through the winter. I love the aromatic foliage and it clips beautifully into low hedging. This was infilled with roses and perennials for an exuberant cottage garden feel.’

20. Create secluded retreats

Image credit: Future PLC/Lizzie Orme

A beautiful cottage garden can help you to relax and unwind. ‘I like to create intimate havens with seating where people can feel completely immersed in the life of the garden,’ says James from The Garden Company.

‘These spaces can often be created with informal planting and I like using plants that will attract bees and butterflies, enhancing the feeling of having escaped from city or town life to the countryside.’

21. Incorporate structural planting

Image credit: Natural Design Studio

‘Use loose, atmospheric planting but don’t forget structure!’ exclaims Phoebe at Natural Design Studio.

‘Loose grasses and various textured perennials will help to create a natural, relaxed cottage feel, but remember to include evergreen shrubs that will give the garden shape and structure when all the herbaceous plants die back in the winter.’

22. Champion rustic materials

Image credit: Future PLC/Mark Bolton

Fill the garden with natural textures and materials to welcome a rural feel to your gardening scheme. From willow screening to wicker baskets for planting, weave in plenty of country-style materials to accentuate the aesthetic of classic cottage decor.

With all natural woven material ensure they are treated to withstand the elements, place them in more sheltered spots within the garden to preserve them further.

23. Grow your own

Image credit: Future PLC/Rachel Whiting

Traditionally cottage gardens were highly practical with an emphasis on growing your own vegetables and herbs, fruit trees – many even keeping livestock. With the ‘grow your own’ trend making a real resurgence over the last year, a veggie plot and potting station is a must for modern cottage gardens, too.

‘Grow your own’ is one of the fastest growing lifestyle movements with the number of Brits choosing a plant-based diet rising by more than 360 percent over the past decade. Coupled with rising food prices, shortages and a growing appreciation of organic produce, it’s no surprise the ‘grow your own’ movement will continue to surge.

24. Provide foundation planting

Image credit: Future PLC/Brent Darby

‘A garden design is only successful if it sits comfortably in its surroundings’ says James from The Garden Company. ‘By using planting at the base of the house, garden walls and terraces, you can blend the boundaries between these ‘hard’ structures and the garden.  This creates a softer, more pleasing effect which is more in keeping with the cottage garden style than straight lines.’

25. Fill borders with delphiniums

Image credit: Future PLC/Jeremy Young

‘Another cottage garden favourite, delphiniums come in stunning shades of white, pink and blue,’ says Marcus from Dobbies. ‘They will often flower for a second time later in the season. Grow through plant supports to hold their flower spikes secure.’ Use delphiniums within borders to add height to your planting scheme.

26. Create structure with arches

Image credit: Future PLC/Jamie Mason

While cottage gardens in the main are relaxed and unstructured it can be beneficial to add key structures to aid planting and add a rustic touch with accessories. A metal arch or pergola is a great example, a style that suits a cottage garden scheme perfectly while at the same time providing support for climbing and trailing plants.

Place an archway over a step to highlight the joining of two different garden zones, helping to create a flow from one into the other.

27. Balance informal planting

Image credit: Future PLC/Paul Graham

‘Cottage gardens lend themselves to abundant and apparently informal planting.  However, on its own and without structure this can look rather unkempt and haphazard for large parts of the year’ advises James from The Garden Company.  ‘I love to use naturalistic plants in combination with more formal planting – yew, hedges, domes and hornbeam for example – which provide a vertical element, sculptural form and sense of order.’

‘These all-year round ‘formal’ plants can be softened and framed with beautiful grasses such as calamagrostis brachytricha and deschampsia Bronze Veil, late flowering perennials (for example, verbena bonariensis and aster x frikartii ‘Monch’).  Broadly speaking, the grasses and perennials provide colour, texture and romance; the trees and hedges provide order.’

28. Immerse yourself among the planting

Image credit: Future PLC/Spike Powell

Take time to smell the roses. Immerse yourself fully within the the planting of a cottage garden by placing a dining table among the flower beds, with a parasol acting as a portable garden shade idea.

A cottage garden is filled with dense planting that lives wild and free, creating a canvas of colour and scent – ideal for pitching an entertaining spot beside, to ensure you’re getting to enjoy the full extent of the beauty of the surrounding plot.

29. Make magical views

Image credit: The Garden Company/James Scott

‘Cottage gardens are inviting and attractive’ explains James from The Garden Company.  ‘It’s important to make functional elements of the garden (e.g. paths, steps, raised borders) a pleasing aspect rather than just a necessary feature. For example, a simple path can become a sensory walkway by using a pergola and fragrant climbing plants.  The whole effect is to frame the view to a gazebo and create a destination point.’

30. Make the most of front gardens

Image credit: Future PLC/Jamie Mason

Don’t neglect the front of your house – add pretty planting to your front garden ideas too. The exterior of this white thatched roof country cottage is beautifully enhanced by a free planting of shrubs, grasses and bedding plants to add uplifting colour. It’s a good indicator from the front garden that the back garden will be bursting with colour and natural loveliness.

31. Set the scene with a charming arbour

Image credit: Future PLC/Spike Powell

A cottage garden can be instantly identifiable from the furniture choices. Country-style furniture, from wrought iron bistro dining sets to ornate wooden arbours, adds a charming touch to set the scene for cottage garden planting.

32. Find a way to include water

Image credit: The Garden Company/James Scott

‘As well as its obvious benefits to a garden, water can add huge value to your cottage garden experience’ says James from The Garden Company. ‘It provides a different habitat for many plants and creatures, has a cooling effect in the summer and adds a new dimension in the form of movement and reflections.  Gentle sounds of moving water can also mask unwanted noise such as traffic and neighbours.’

33. Style garden accessories

Image credit: Future PLC/Spike Powell

Twee maybe, but a kennel makeover is a sweet way to enhance the look of a cottage-style garden. Use garden paint ideas, preferable a soft pastel to coordinating a planting colour scheme, and sweet fabric door curtains will make a dog kennel offer so much more to the space.

34. Pretty up a potting shed

Image credit: Future PLC/Jon Day

What cottage garden would be complete without a picturesque summerhouse or she shed? Up the cottage-style decor by adding a lick of paint in an invigorating shade of green and introduce floral print fabrics to soften the interior to make it feel more like a homely cottage.

How do I start a cottage garden from scratch?

Dobbies Horticultural Director, Marcus Eyles, reveals his step by step guide for creating a cottage garden:

Prepare the soil ‘First prepare the soil for planting by forking in plenty of manure or garden compost and remove any weeds.’
Select your plants ‘Choose your favourite cottage garden plants, mixing heights, colours, textures and flowering times. A mixture of flowering and foliage plants works well, including annuals and cut flowers’.
Plan a planting layout ‘Position in drifts for a natural look, planting shorter ones towards the front and taller ones behind. Self-seeding plants such as foxgloves and verbenas are a great way to knit the border together.’
Put in place and water ‘Using a garden spade, plant each to the same depth as its growing pot. Firm gently and water well, then add a layer of mulch around your plants to help retain moisture.
Provide support ‘As they grow, insert canes or metal plant supports around taller flowering plants to keep them secure in strong winds. Put them in early in the season and they’ll soon
be disguised by foliage.
Nurture and prune Cut back faded stems in autumn. Then in spring, fork in some general fertiliser and add a fresh layer of mulch.

What plants make a cottage garden?

Image credit: Future PLC/Mark Bolton

A classic cottage garden is never complete with a variety of roses. The main pruning period for all roses is spring, depending on location in the UK – usually early in March in the south, and around the end of March in the north. If you prune too early in the season, there is a risk that the first flush of growth prompted by pruning may be burnt by frost.

All roses are prone to pests and diseases, so take special care to treat any problems as soon as you spot them. You can prevent them by keeping your roses strong and healthy: pruning, deadheading and feeding will help. Spraying your plants with rose pesticide may help to keep pests at bay.

In addition to roses foxgloves and delphiniums are also hugely popular for cottage gardens. Loved by bees and butterflies, these flowers help to bring a garden to life with the gentle sound of buzzing and humming – joyous background music of mother nature to enjoy the time spent outside.

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