The Chelsea Flower Show is the pinnacle of the garden design world. It’s full of inspiring creations and stunning plants. Get inspired by the world’s best gardening show and discover all the gardening trends from the Chelsea Flower Show 2015.

Some people say that show gardens are not blueprints for your garden at home. They are showy, big-budget creations filled with plants that look their best at the same time.

That may be true. But they are full of great ideas you can take home and implement in your own garden. Here’s my top 10 from this year’s show.

Click on the pictures to enlarge them!

Stone

Stone spiral

Stone spiral

Chatsworth Laurent-Perrier

Chatsworth Laurent-Perrier

This is one the biggest trends from the show this year. Stone is a good material for landscaping because it’s natural and gives a sense of permanence. It makes your garden feel like it’s always been there.

The award for the most stones in a show garden goes to the Chatsworth Laurent-Perrier garden, which contained 300 tonnes of stone!

But it works well on a smaller scale, creating shape and structure among the plants. Stone is also perfect for water features.

Sentebale waterfall

Sentebale waterfall

Stone fire pit

Stone fire pit

Orange

Sentebale garden

Sentebale garden

Homebase garden

Homebase garden

The most popular colour this year was orange. Designers built on its prominence last year to use it in almost every garden this time around!

It adds a bright, warm tone to the garden and works well with purple and red.

I also noticed it being used alongside lots of silvery foliage and grasses, as well as in tropical planting schemes. The meadow flower trend is still going strong too.

I’ve picked my top 10 orange plants from the show here.

Orange grass

Orange grass

Tropical orange

Tropical orange

Cow parsley

Cow parsley

Cow parsley

Viking garden

Viking garden

This was probably the most-used plant in the show. It’s great for wild, cottage and woodland gardens and has a relaxed feel. The plants move nicely in the wind too.

Cow parsley is a type of umbellifer, which are known for their showy clusters of flowers. Good alternatives include fennel, ammi majus and angelica.

Plant cow parsley with other tall plants and grasses to add height and movement. It works well with brighter colours, or in an all-white colour scheme.

Umbellifers

Umbellifers

All-white garden

All-white garden

Still pools

Reflect in the water

Reflect in the water

Hidden pool

Hidden pool

Still water features are a clever way to create a soothing, serene area in the garden. Plus they don’t need complicated pumps and wiring!

To recreate this look at home, build a water feature with straight lines and grow tall plants up to the edges. They should reflect nicely in the water to forge a sense of symmetry and calm.

If you don’t have space for a large pool, you can create the illusion of depth with aquatic dyes. They make the water seem deep and opaque, and they don’t harm plants or wildlife.

Deep water

Deep water

M&G garden

M&G garden

Magenta

Healthy Cities garden

Healthy Cities garden

Naturalistic planting

Naturalistic planting

Purpley-red was a popular colour in the show gardens and often used with the ubiquitous orange too. It was also planted among purples like salvia and irises.

Magenta adds depth and warmth to planting schemes. And it’s easy to recreate the look at home. If you are not comfortable pairing contrasting colours, choose similar warm tones.

There are some great varieties of magenta plants to get you started in the list of my 12 favourite plants from Chelsea.

Magenta plants

Magenta plants

Telegraph garden

Telegraph garden

Sculptural circles

Circles and rings

Circles and rings

Spy-through circles

Spy-through circles

Circles are a common design feature in gardens and other spaces. They have balance and symmetry, as well as multiple symbolic meanings.

Spy-through circles are effective in a garden – they focus the eye through to one particular area. I loved the one made of crushed tin cans too. It’s a fab way to make a garden feature for next to nothing.

You can also use circles within a long narrow garden to make it feel wider and more open. They were used well in the Homebase garden as stepping stones that echoed the shape of the topiary balls.

Circle stepping stones

Circle stepping stones

Tin can circle

Tin can circle

Dry gardens

African garden

African garden

Royal Bank of Canada garden

Royal Bank of Canada garden

Sustainability is a big trend in the garden world today, and at Chelsea Flower Show, including water saving and harvesting. With water prices rising and supplies diminishing, many of us don’t want a garden that needs watering every day.

The popularity of dry gardens reflects this trend. The Royal Bank of Canada garden took water saving as its theme, and displayed a zero-irrigation garden.

Other exhibitors built Mediterranean and African gardens showing drought-tolerant plants. And the use of gravel mulch cuts down water evaporation from the soil.

Mediterranean garden

Mediterranean garden

Gravel garden

Gravel garden

Slate

Brewin Dolphin garden

Brewin Dolphin garden

Slate chips

Slate chips

Slate lends the garden a clean, contemporary feel. Some 40,000 pieces of slate were used in the striking Brewin Dolphin garden to create those modern floating platforms.

Elsewhere, slate was used primarily as gravel, giving paths a darker feel. I also loved the slate chips used underneath the water features in the Telegraph garden.

The Great Chelsea Garden Challenge front garden used slate slabs to create a driveway for parking. The slate gravel also reduced watering needs while allowing water to soak into the soil, rather than run off the surface.

Front garden slate

Front garden slate

Slate gravel

Slate gravel

Grasses

L'Occitane garden

L’Occitane garden

Cloudy Bay garden

Cloudy Bay garden

Grasses are one of the most underrated plants in the world. They add texture and movement to planting schemes, and create a rich backdrop for flowers to shine.

The popularity of dry and meadow gardens meant that grasses were used to great effect this year. Light, wispy grasses lifted the L’Occitane and Cloudy Bay gardens, adding to the airy feeling of weightlessness.

Grass seed heads also make a fantastic garden feature – some even look like fireworks. And shorter, greener grasses add height and shape to naturalistic grassy planting.

Grass seed heads

Grass seed heads

Naturalistic planting

Naturalistic planting

Woodland

M&G garden

M&G garden

Chatsworth Laurent-Perrier garden

Chatsworth Laurent-Perrier garden

The sylvan trend shows no sign of abating. It deserves a mention again this year because it’s still so popular.

Trees and woody shrubs can be used in any garden, no matter how small. They provide shade and shelter, as well as privacy.

This year, the woodland trend was combined with the resurgence of cottage gardens. Trees were under planted with the flower spires of lupins, foxgloves and delphiniums.

Cottage woodland

Cottage woodland

Lupins

Lupins

For more garden planting ideas, check out my blog:

Or check out my Pinterest board for more ideas: