Garden Edging Ideas Your Yard
Give your landscaping some neat outlines with our flagstone and brick garden edging ideas. Create a crisp, clean design within your landscaping by using borders to outline different areas of your garden. Define designated growing areas in your flower beds and vegetable gardens. These inexpensive garden edging ideas will add character and texture to landscaping. In the afternoon, you can create a rustic brick or concrete stone exterior for any area using simple materials.
1 Brick garden edging
Brick is a typical garden edging idea because it is classic, widely available, and inexpensive. Push the bricks tightly together to minimize gaps where the floor can slip. Lay your bricks on a bed of sand to prevent heat and unevenness at the edge of your garden.
2 Diagonal brick garden edging
For a 19th-century domino effect at the edge of your garden, place old, mismatched bricks diagonally. Dig a trench and add several inches of sand to the drain so the bricks don't rise. Place the bricks in the trench, one half exposed, leaning tightly against the next, then fill with soil. If you are edging several garden beds, slope all the bricks in the same direction.
3 Flagstone Garden Edging
Edging your landscaping garden beds with flagstone gives them a classic look that's particularly well-suited to country and cottage gardens. Flagstones are available in many colors and thicknesses, so they can easily be used to coordinate or contrast with your plants, other stonework in the landscape, or your home's stonework. Irregularly shaped, the flagstones are durable and stacked securely in the yard.
4 Rock Garden Edge
Mix and match rock patterns and colors for a natural stone garden edging idea. Large multicolored rocks complete the informal style of this landscape. The winding, rounded boulders allow Sweet Allies to creep between and among the rocks, creating a lacy, scalloped appearance in this landscaped flower bed.
5 Cobblestone Garden Edging
Square stones of granite garden edging combine with Korean boxwood fencing to shape this landscape. 'Annabelle' and oak leaf hydrangeas add white-blooming flowers and their large leaves contrast with the textures and patterns of the pavement, edging, and hedge.
6 Garden Edging Ideas with Plants
Low, trailing plants are a wonderful landscaping garden edging idea. Planted in a long clump, low-growing sweet alyssum (shown here), veronica, bouncing bed, artemisia, coralbells, or candytuft will soften hard edges and provide a splash of color.
7 Recycle-Bottle Garden Edge
Edge your landscape in stained-glass bottles to infuse your yard with a whimsical, down-home look. Bury the necks of bottles sideways into the soil to use as garden edging. To prevent soil or weeds from migrating from the lawn into your beds, sink aluminum foil 8 inches into the ground with glow bottles.
8 Cast concrete flanges
Concrete garden edging makes mowing easy, and its serpentine shape creates a winding path in the landscape shown here. Varying elevations add interest and allow for a gentle slope or uneven terrain transition.
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