How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (2024)

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Gemma Johnstone

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (1)

Gemma Johnstone

Gemma Johnstone is a gardening expert who has written 120-plus articles for The Spruce covering how to care for a large variety of plants from all over the world. She's traveled all over Europe, living now in Italy.

Updated on 09/14/23

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How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (2)

Whether you want a crafty project that lets your kids' imagination run wild or a creative garden addition that’s sure to be a talking point, you don’t have to be a follower of folklore to design a fairy garden.

Not sure where to start with your whimsical wonderland plans? We’ve got you covered with this step-by-step guide for how to make an enchanting fairy garden, regardless of the location and your available space and budget.

What Is a Fairy Garden?

Fairy gardens are typically miniature indoor or outdoor decorative gardens with an enchanted, story-telling theme—perfect places for magical pixies or sprites to visit when no one is looking. Usually put together in some sort of container with fairy-sized plants and accessories, you are only limited by your imagination — and budget — in terms of what you include.

1. Choose Your Fairy Garden Location

First, you need to decide if you want to invite the fairies into your house or to a spot in your yard. Outside, you can incorporate existing eco-friendly and realistic elements from your garden into the design—think plants, tree stumps, water features, or old concrete bird baths—but your accessories must be weatherproof.

You can add more delicate details inside, but space might be more limited.

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (3)

2. Choose Your Theme

Select a theme or story to guide what plants and accessories you’ll want to include in your fairy garden design. Picking something that fits in with existing garden features can help make the task less complex and costly.

Looking for inspiration? Here are a few fairy garden ideas:

  • Beach theme—ideal if you already have a big shell collection or a xeriscape yard
  • Woodland wonderland
  • Cottage garden
  • Fairy village
  • Fairy characters from books or movies, like Tinkerbell or Puck
  • Rivers and waterfalls

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (4)

3. Make a Plan

You’ve settled on a theme; now it’s time to flesh out a plan — even if it is rough — for setting up your fairy garden and the supplies you’ll need. Have a focal point to help draw visitors' eyes to the design and avoid cluttering the design with too many plants and accessories.

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (5)

4. Choose Your Fairy Garden Container

Unless you have a sprawling fairy garden in a section of your yard landscape, like a raised bed, you’ll need a container to build your fantasy world in. But don’t rush out to buy a planter or a fairy garden craft kit. There’s a good chance you’ll have something already in your garden or garage that will make an ideal fairy haven. Some ideas include:

  • Old wheelbarrow
  • Tree stump
  • Tin bucket
  • Baby bath
  • Terrarium
  • Birdbath
  • Rattan basket (best for indoors)
  • Teacups (if you’re going particularly pocket-sized)

You want a container with good drainage if you are going to incorporate living plants into your design.

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (6)

5. Pick Your Plants and Potting Mix

Consider your theme and location when selecting plant size, texture, and colour. Pick plants that suit the light your location offers. You don’t want sun-loving species if your fairy garden is in a shady spot.

Bunching plants with the same care requirements creates the perfect hiding spots for visiting nymphs, but don’t pick so many that it overcrowds the container. You want space for accessories and other decorative elements.

Low-growing, small-leaf plants work well to create the sense of scale you need. Small succulents, herbs, and sprawling, low-maintenance ground covers are all good candidates. Slow-growing, evergreen species offer year-round interest, and you won’t have to worry about them quickly getting unruly and outgrowing the garden. Always choose species with similar care requirements.

Below are some popular fairy garden plants:

  • Alyssum
  • Bonsai
  • Creeping thyme
  • Dill
  • Ferns (including the aptly named fairy fern)
  • Hens and chicks
  • Irish Moss
  • Lavender
  • Marigolds
  • Sedum

Make sure the potting mix you pick works for the plants featured in your fairy garden, and if you need extra drainage, add a layer of pea gravel to the bottom of your container.

And, if you’ve got a brown thumb or want plants that don’t fit your chosen location's conditions, don’t be afraid to integrate artificial ones into your fairy garden design.

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (7)

6. Position Your Accessories

Now comes the most fun part: decorating. You’ve got so many options for decorating your garden, and you can add to it over time. Will you include some fairy figurines or just have furnishings for the native nymphs to come and use?

Some fun items you can include in your fairy garden are:

  • Sculpting clay for bespoke accessories
  • Natural items, like bark and acorns
  • Popsicle sticks for fairy fencing
  • Birdhouses for Brownie bungalows
  • Broken but blunt tiles for steps or cladding
  • Pebble tables
  • Twine for ladders or swings
  • Mirrors to recreate the look of a pond

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (8)

FAQ

  • How do you maintain a fairy garden?

    How much maintenance your fairy garden needs depends on its size and what you include in the design. If it features living plants, you’ll need to water (and possibly fertilize) them, and they might need pruning or pinching to keep them fairy-sized.

    Your garden might need protection or to be moved indoors in harsh winters, and figurines and other decorative elements will need cleaning and a new application of polyurethane sealant occasionally to keep them weatherproof.

  • What should be in a fairy garden?

    What you include in your fairy garden depends on its location, chosen theme, available space, and budget. Typically, there will be a selection of petite plants and decorative fairy-themed accessories within some sort of container.

  • What is the purpose of a fairy garden?

    Fairy gardens connect us with nature, unleash our creativity and imagination, and can be a fun project for kids or to tap into your inner child. It also adds unique interest to your yard—perfect to create a talking point with your neighbors.

51 Beautiful Small Garden Ideas for Your Outdoor Space

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps (2024)

FAQs

How to Make a Fairy Garden in 6 Easy Steps? ›

For this fairy house I only used cardboard hot glue and acrylic paint. I always try to make my houses in three easy steps: 1 Basic shape For the first step I cut out the walls and roof and assembled it using hot glue. I added a cardboard tower, a chimney and a couple of smaller roofs for the main windows.

How do you make a magic garden for kids? ›

You'll need a container, soil, plants, and decorations. Your container can be a pot, wagon, wheelbarrow, or drawer. Choose small plants like succulents, ferns, or tiny flowers. You can add lots of decorations like tiny furniture, bridges, ponds, or fairy houses.

What are the rules for a fairy garden? ›

RULES OF THUMB
  • Don't use iron or nickel in the fairy garden as they will repel your fairies.
  • Fairies appreciate when you recycle, compost and garden organically.
  • Perfect playmates for fairies are fireflies, ladybugs and butterflies.
  • Fairies have an affection for honey, sugar and sweet cakes.

How to make a fairy house in your backyard? ›

Attract your fairy or gnome with a beautifully decorated house. Work from the outside in, starting with large outdoor embellishments like doors and windows before adding smaller pieces like mailboxes. Interiors can include moss for carpeting and tiny furniture fashioned from twigs and pebbles. Use your imagination!

What is a kids fairy garden? ›

Fairy gardens require small, low growing plants, the sort generally bought for a rockery if the garden is to be outside, but make sure the plants you choose need the same care in terms of watering, amount of direct sun etc. The people you buy them from should be able to advise you.

How to make a mini garden for kids? ›

Give your child a tray or 6-celled planter and some soil. Add a few small stones to the bottom of the planter to help with drainage. Then use a spoon to fill the tray or each cell about 2/3 full of soil. Let your child pick one or more types of seeds to plant.

How do you make a fairy garden step by step? ›

Step by Step: How to Make a Fairy Garden in a Pot
  1. Step 1: Prepare. ...
  2. Dream & Plan. ...
  3. Planting. ...
  4. Add the main features, pebbles and extra natural materials. ...
  5. Add accessories, fairies and friends. ...
  6. Add fairies and their friends. ...
  7. Water your plants and add special touches + a fairy blessing.

Do fairies like mirrors? ›

Shiny things—fairies love to look at their reflection, so include shiny things like a mirror or a dish of water in your garden design.

How do I attract fairies to my fairy garden? ›

Roses, which are a favorite of many gardeners, are beloved of fairies as well. Roses can be put in any sunny spot, and will provide shade for any fairy dwellings you may have set out. Thyme is an herb that not only attracts fairies, but also allows humans to see them when worn.

How do you make fake water for a fairy garden? ›

After you've finished gluing your stones, fill the base of your pond with hot glue, this will create the illusion of water. The more glue you add, the deeper your pond will look.

How do you attract fairies to a fairy house? ›

11 tips to attract fairies
  1. a water fountain in your home that clatters on crystal or a rock.
  2. a plant near your pond.
  3. a plant that grows out of or on a rock.
  4. a herb garden mainly with old stone formations.
  5. shrines and altars to nature gods.
  6. wine cellars (yes don't ask me why but it seems to work)
  7. fantasy altars with offerings.
May 6, 2021

What are the natural materials for fairy houses? ›

Please use only natural materials – feathers, dry grasses, leaves, sticks, pebbles, shells, bark from a fallen tree, milkweed, moss, nuts, pods, acorns, berries, gourds, miniature pumpkins, pinecones. Birch bark is an excellent building material. All fairy houses must appear to be made entirely of natural components.

How do you make fairy dust that really works? ›

To make your own pixie dust you'll need:
  1. 1/4 cup Baking soda.
  2. 2-4 Tablespoons of lavender buds like these or 2-4 Tablespoons of citrus Peel (you can use a few drops of essential oil instead)
  3. A salt shaker, spice jar, or small glass or plastic jar with a shaker lid (like this or this)
Jun 27, 2017

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