A cottage and its garden are one thing — the line between inside and out should feel soft and porous, with the seasons visible indoors in whatever the garden's offering that week. Bringing the cottage garden indoors is the simplest, cheapest, most authentic way to make a cottage feel alive. Here's how I do it, all year round.
Forage Into Jugs
The heart of it is a jug of foraged stems, changed with the season — roses and sweet peas in summer, dahlias and seed heads in autumn, evergreen branches and hellebores in winter, blossom in spring. Arranged loosely in a jug rather than tightly in a formal vase, garden cuttings bring the cottage to life. It's free, it's seasonal, and it's the most authentic cottage touch there is.
Herbs on the Sill
The kitchen windowsill holds pots of herbs — basil, parsley, rosemary, mint — useful for cooking and lovely to look at. A deep cottage sill is a natural home for herbs and small plants, and a row of pots brings the garden right into the working heart of the house. Matched to the light each window gets, they thrive and keep the kitchen green.
A Planter Light
My favourite way to merge garden and light is a planter light — a fixture that holds a trailing plant and casts a warm glow at once. It's the perfect object for a cottage, bringing greenery and lamplight together in a single piece. In a corner or the garden room it glows softly among the leaves, and it's the detail visitors always notice.
Plants Throughout
Beyond the sills, a few plants in simple pots throughout the cottage soften the stone and bring living warmth — a fern in a dark corner, a geranium on the table, ivy trailing from a shelf. The biophilic design collection is full of this bring-the-garden-in spirit. Choose plants for the light each spot gets, and a little greenery makes the whole house feel alive.
Keep It Loose and Seasonal
The cottage-garden look indoors is relaxed and gathered, never florist-perfect. Loose jugs of mixed stems, a slightly wild arrangement, whatever's growing that week — the imperfection is the charm. A cottage should reflect its garden's rhythm, abundant in summer and sparer in winter, rather than holding a static, styled display all year.
Light the Greenery
Plants and stems come alive beside warm lamplight in the evening — a jug of foraged branches glowing beside a lamp, a planter light among the leaves, herbs catching the light on the sill. Warm light and greenery together are the cottage at its cosiest. A plant in a dark corner does little; the same plant beside a warm lamp glows.
Alive in Winter Too
The garden gives less in winter, but the cottage needn't go bare. Forage evergreen branches, holly, and seed heads, keep hardy herbs and plants on the sills, and lean on warm lamplight and a planter light to keep the green glowing on dark afternoons. A jug of evergreen stems and warm light keep a cottage feeling alive through the coldest months.
The Garden Indoors, Always
Bringing the garden inside isn't a one-off styling job; it's an ongoing rhythm — cutting a fresh jug each week, tending the herbs, moving the plants to the light. That living, changing greenery is what ties a cottage to its garden and makes it feel grown rather than decorated. It's free, it's seasonal, and it's the soul of cottage style.
Bringing the Garden in, Season by Season
Bringing a cottage garden indoors is a year-round rhythm: roses and sweet peas in summer, dahlias and seed heads in autumn, evergreens and hellebores in winter, blossom in spring, all in loose jugs. Add herbs on the sill and a planter light among the greenery. It's free, seasonal, and the most authentic cottage touch there is.
Light the Greenery Warmly
Plants and foraged stems come alive beside warm lamplight in the evening — a jug of branches glowing by a lamp, a planter light among the leaves, herbs catching the light on the sill. A plant in a dark corner does little; the same plant beside a warm light glows. Warm light and greenery together are the cottage at its cosiest.
Shop this post: planter lights and the biophilic design collection
My friend Naomi at Nest by Naomi keeps more plants alive than anyone I know — if you want to go deeper on indoor greenery, send yourself over to her.


