Inspiration

How to decorate your garden with antiques

Written by B | 24 July 2019 | Updated 28 April 2023

Flowers and foliage are stunning but labour intensive. If you’re looking to quickly revitalise an all-too-familiar garden; carefully chosen ornaments, statues and even antiques will give you the best results. Experts in Antiques Dési van Rhee and Paul Wullems explain why, featuring classical Chinese landscaping, whimsical wonderlands and idyllic Italian vistas.


Gardens aren’t simply spaces for gorgeous flora and endless foliage. They're also a place to extend your interior style into. “Whether your garden is large or small, with carefully placed ornaments, garden seats or sculptures you can create an outdoor room with exciting views and quiet corners”, says Expert in Antiques Dési van Rhee.



Sculptures are a great way of bringing some elegant and ancient glamour to your garden

Why decorate your garden in antiques and not simply more plants? "For me, decorating your garden with antique pieces allow you to be more creative when it comes to colours and textures", explains Expert in Antiques Paul Wullems. "Antique ornaments in cast iron or weathered stone provide a different background agains colourful flowers or luscious green trees and shrubs. Further, adding a piece that is 200 or 300 years old immediately transforms your garden, however recent, into a place with history". 


Classical Chinese

The essence of classical Chinese garden design is using artificial landscapes to mimic natural scenery. Strategically placed pavilions, ponds, zigzagging galleries, structured bonsai, flowing paths and low walls create the sensation of walking through a verdant tableau. Each part of the garden tells a story, and the gardener can showcase their own unique taste at every turn.



One of the many "windows" in a Chinese garden that will lead you through to the next tableau.


Architectural ornaments play a vital role in creating this kind of garden, especially if you do not have room to showcase some of the grander aspects of classical Chinese gardens. “No classical Chinese garden is complete without a Gongshi or Scholar's Rock,” explains Dési. “This is a naturally occurring or shaped rock which is traditionally appreciated by Chinese scholars.” Water, be it a lake or a humble rockpool, sits at the centre of these gardens. The use of Chinese art like antique bronze bowls to create miniature underwater worlds allow the gardener to tweak their designs in line with the seasons.


A Buddha in the foliage.

For those with a larger garden, the use of statues and sculpture adds to the atmosphere of surprise and reveal. Training fast-growing climbing plants such as jasmine, clematis armandii or ivy to grow over arching trellises creates the “doorways” and “windows” that play such an important part of classical Chinese gardens. On passing through, your visitors will be greeted by strategically placed bronze and stone statues, rock pools and, if you’re feeling playful, maybe even some hanging lanterns.

Whimsical wonderland

A combination of rustic hipster chic and fairytale gardening. The creation of nostalgia-infused wonderlands is becoming increasingly popular among urban gardeners, and it’s easy to see why. As the digital generations continue to rediscover the joys of analogue lives, our gardens become offline oases. These whimsical gardens are usually a highly stylised version of the “dens” and treehouses of childhood.



Vintage birdcages are a wonderful way to showcase a flowering vine or succulent.

Marble fireplaces resting against stone walls become an interesting trellis for frothy white climbing hydrangeas. Or you can try a Virginia creeper, these delicate vines change colour with the season and their russet autumn leaves will contrast wonderfully with creamy marble. Terracotta jugs spill forth waves of violet lobelia or alyssum. Ornate birdcages hanging from a canopy are perfect for hoya and string of pearls succulents. Although some words of warning from Dési: “To create that whimsical ambiance, opt for brocante one would traditionally not use in the garden. Just keep in mind that softwood objects perish quickly.”

A water feature, a bench, or a luxury experience: standing bathtubs are surprisingly versatile.

Those with bigger gardens might even be tempted by that whimsical staple: the standing bathtub. You can have it fully installed, enabling you to bath outside or use it to store gardening equipment. If you’re opting for the second option, it is easy to commission a wooden lid (to keep your pots and shears out of sight) and create a unique garden bench. Gardners with less space will find a few thick, jewel and scarlet rugs are a great way to create a sunny spot to relax and admire your handy work.



Combine soft textures with antique pots and plants for a garden corner you won't want to leave

Finally, no garden is complete without some form of seating, says Paul. "Any garden should have a bench or sofa. Not only can it serve as a focal point for your garden but it's a vantage point too. Whether you opt for more comfy mid-century modern seating or a marble antique bench, it allows you to take the time to enjoy your garden after all the work you've done and contemplate the changing seasons". Go for something antique and add some cushions to it, plus hang up some string lights and put down a rug, a lamp and candles for a quiet romance of your own.

Idyllic Italian

Traditional Italian gardens offer a vista of verdant topiary, with relatively few flowers. Colour and variation are added to the landscape by using a rainbow of evergreen plants; from the pearly velvet Centaurea, through to banks of violet-rose coloured bush clover. Narrower gardens will benefit from the use of strategically placed box shrubs. Broad gardens, in contrast, are at their most beautiful when they are built around a water feature.



Water features and statues are two of the key components to any Italian garden.

Scents are also an important consideration when creating an Italian garden, and the floral plants that do make the cut, so to speak, are often chosen for their perfume. Creamy winter honeysuckle and hyssops are popular, alongside aesthetically appealing Italian herbs such as rosemary and chives. The focal point of any true Italian garden, however, is the statues.


Complement the gorgeous aromas and visuals of your garden with the trickling water of a fountain.


Depictions of the Roman gods fighting, loving, causing mischief or just posing artfully will bring a certain artful elegance to even the humblest of gardens. For those gardeners who prefer to devote themselves to symmetrical hedges, plinths and wall ornaments are a popular option. Another thing to consider is a fountain. Dési: “I just love fountains and the sound of trickling water, it is so soothing. And remember: don't remove lichen and mosses from your stone (fountain) sculptures; they are nature's patina!” Decorative urns, sundials and obelisks create a more subtle tableau while maintaining the Italian theme.

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