Pavers, bricks, railroad ties, rocks...go to any landscape designer and these are the edging options you'll find. Where oh where has all the creativity gone? While lush lawns and gorgeous landscaping are sure to raise the resell value of your home, a little whimsy could go a long way while you are actually living there.
Give it up for the folks that created these landscape edgings. They were definitely in touch with their inner artiste -- expressions of hobbies, eco-consciousness and eclectic sides all around. Be inspired by these crafty ideas then think about how your garden could be an extension of yourself!

Large quahog clam shells line a flower garden near the sea. Photo: Gina Provenzano
Flickr user: Gary Lennon
Bowling balls: The Big Lebowski would be all over this garden lane. Using retired bowling balls as a landscape border yields striking results. While probably best if displayed in moderation, don't spare any of the psychedelic swirling colors from the mix.
Perhaps cars rev your engine more than throwing strikes. Junk yard hub caps have been lining fences for years. Why not update and polish up the look by burying them halfway down along the garden edge?
At left, mosaic border edge, Kaffe Fassett. At right, recycled glass bottles, ReadyMade.
Broken plates: If your favorite plates are beyond repair, fashion a mosaic trim. It's truly special when the borders are made from something with a bit of kitsch 'n history, like Great Aunt Maggie's old china.
Bottles: Forgo the five-cent return and take your drinks to a whole new level. Recycle bottles by inverting them and burrowing the necks at least halfway into the ground. Whether you work in orderly rows or along a meandering path, the colored glass bottles catch the light and send lovely reflected light onto your garden.
Ceramic plate border, Flickr user: MJIgallery on Flickr
Chipped plates: Chipped vintage ceramic plates and tag sale bargains are wonderful expressions for a cottage garden. Unify the look with matching plates, or go eclectic with a mix of patterns and colors. Be sure to secure plates by embedding them at least half way into the dirt, or setting them in a narrow cement trench.
If fashion plays a bigger role in your life than food, opt for a quirky display of shoes or garden boots instead. Shop thrift stores and tag sales, and fill them with cement to line you beds, otherwise your decorative trims may end up on your neighbors' lawn.
At left, oven willow border, Gardener's Supply Co. At right, nautical roping, Photo: Caralee from Outdoor Resorts and Properties.
Willow branches: For a more traditional approach that is anything but run-of-the-mill, try shaping willow branches in a lovely crisscrossing pattern and setting them in the soil. Secure each intersection with wire. The overall effect is free-spirited, yet contained.
Don't have the patience to craft your own garden path trellis? Woven willow edging can be found at better garden shops and online.
Roping: A homeowner wanting to meld her vegetable garden with the nautical theme of her child's play pirate ship used heavy-duty marine roping and wooden posts to line the edge. The look can easily be incorporated in a more grown-up location situation.
Old ski fencing, Telestar Logistics.
Wagon wheel fencing, 1.bp.blogspot.
Swap the wagon wheels for bicycle wheels if cycling is more your speed. With radiating spokes and shiny rims your yard will be riding high.
Whatever your style, whatever your quirk, channel the spirit and express it in garden borders and trims that say something more than standard. Strive for spectacular.









Reader comments (Page 1 of 3)
Tacky, tacky, tacky.....whoa! As a landscape designer, all I can say is that this doesn't sit well with me. There is one basic principle when dealing with yards, it's called the KISS -- KEEP IT SUPREMELY SIMPLE. These eyesores just don't do it for me....sorry.
ReplyAs a landscape designer I'd venture that you lack individuality and follow the textbook approach. Which is fine, but not for everyone. Many people enjoy, even thrive, on personalizing their space, be it inside or out. These ideas are creative and fun.
BTW....KISS ....30 years in sales .....I always heard it as keep it simple, stupid.
Most of those are a little much, but I've been doing the wine bottle border for years (only single row). Everyone loves it, and my landlord probably thinks I'm an alcoholic, but hey. What's great about the wine bottles is that when it rains or you water, a little water will stay in the indent in the bottom of the bottle. This creates humidity for the garden, and it dries up in a day or two -- not enough time for the mosquito larvae to live!
I have had occasion to browse for ideas like these but I am totally in shock!! I agree with Sally, how TACKY!! It's bad enough I can't grow a weed but to "put it on show" with these ideas is really a bad idea!! I think I'll stick to the basic brick, stone ideas!!
ReplyWell if you can grow weeds then we don't want you in the garden. The BEST part about a personal garden is just that, I or we, do it as we please and to what ever makes us smile. Like Ahmed on YArd crashers, If it makes us feel good then lets do it and enjoy it. I don't decorates my garden to please anyone else but myself and my birds and other small friends.
The wagon wheel idea in the right area, country setting, is very nice. Plates buried in the ground, bottles in the ground etc is very tacky. My son owns a landscaping business and has done design landscaping for many years and he wouldn't go for this idea at all. Less is not necessarily better but putting the right things in the right places is what it is all about. Sometimes too simply means you have no good ideas for the area and should allow another designer to take over at that point.
ReplyThe seashells are cute if you live on the water but you'd need so many of them to do a whole bed!!! I believe in sticking with nature and natural decor when decorating outside. The household stuff like plates and skis are junky and extrememly tacky. These dumb so-called designers suggest decorating in cheap ways and to be honest....it looks cheap too.
ReplyI agree--keep nature "natural". Sometimes quirky is good but I REALLY don't want to see any of this around my neighborhood although I agree that the wagon wheels, in the right country setting, are nice.
ReplyPersonal taste aside, the major issue that any landscaper would have with these ideas is that they present tactical issues with upkeep and maintenance of the garden. How exactly do you get a weedwacker around some of these borders without taking out the borders? Weeding from the edge of the lawn would be difficult because you'd constantly be reaching over fragile borders. What a pain!
ReplyFor some of these ideas, like the chipped plates, safety would be an issue as well. All you'd need is one small child tripping over themselves and landing on an old and fragile chipped plate or a sharp edged seashell.
oops, what was I thinking? I'd better cancel that day at the beach, I wouldn't want the kids to get impaled on the seashells... anyway, I live near the ocean, and a seashell border trim would be very charming as any flower bed border in a seacoast cottage setting. ce la vie...
I agree with Cin. I live on the water, but would never line a flower bed with shells.....besides that, I don't have enough time to go and pick them up off of the beach.....not that I would. The skis are extremely tacky, AND, I cannot believe that anyone could or would own that many skis. It looks like an afterthought!
ReplyI live on the beach and I would never be able to find big shells like that little a lone hundreds of them to use as a decreative border. Those plates are collectable and the skis would cost a forture to make an entire wall out of them. I could see if you lived in an artsy cottage but still to devote an entire article about this is a little too much. What about those hurricanes, can you see all that "junk" flying all over the place.
ReplyWhat does "little alone mean???
Please leave the sea shells on the beack and not in your yard. Avoid the bags of shells you see at the tourist shops as they are harvested live in foreign countrys and there are no regulations to protect them from over harvesting. The best idea was the KISS idea.
ReplyWOW NEVER SAW SUCH UGLY IDEAS IN MY LIFE also skie's have chemicals on them to treat them and they break down and come off the ski's and will contaminate the ground the chemicals are meant to stay cold, I dont even think a restaurent has that many broken plates who ever there landscape arcitect is is worthless hope they dont use those ideas in there portfolleo
OMG....Why would anyone want that kind of junk displayed in their yard. As for the wheels and the rope they have a nice look to them, but the rest is trailer trash decorations.
ReplyWTF????
ReplyI had to chuckle--and surprised they left out old tires and broken toilets as flower beds!
ReplyI PROBABLY WOULDNT HAVE THIS STUFF IN MY YARD , BUT TO EACH HIS OWN
ReplyOur family lives in the country along the shores of beautiful Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri. The roping, shells, and the wagon wheels can add a nice effect in the right location, and as long as you don't over do it. A shell or two placed in various locations in flower beds, etc, look great, a whole line of them, not so much. We installed roping along with piers around one side of a deck and a foot bridge adjacent to a large Koi pond by our house, which looks awesome. Also, we have a few wagon wheels along with various rustic farming equipment throughout our acreage, which looks good as well. But, plates and bowling balls, I think not. To me it looks ridiculous. However, I suppose everyone has a right to their own tastes and opinions.
Reply