4 Clever Container Garden Combos to Try

You don’t need a big yard to grow your dream garden — just a big planter.

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Photo by: Helen Norman; Styled by Elizabeth Demos

Helen Norman; Styled by Elizabeth Demos

With these container garden ideas, it's easier than ever to design a beautiful planter that will refresh your outdoor space — no backyard required. These one-pot wonders are sure to liven up your porch, patio or deck for spring.

One-Pot Flower Garden

The blooms in this cheerful mix look different from one another, but they all need full to partial sunlight and moist, well-drained soil, so they can happily coexist. To fill out the container, plan to buy two of each plant. Place taller stems like the snapdragons in the back and shorties in the front. Editor's tip: Make a deep planter like this easier to lift by placing an upside-down plastic pot at the bottom before you add soil.

Multicolor Flowering Planter

Container Garden of Flowers

This flowery container garden with snapdragon and daisies was featured in HGTV Magazine.

Photo by: Erin Scott

Erin Scott

Shown here: Penny purple picotee viola, pot marigold, snapdragon, Marguerite daisy and Nesia sunshone nemesia.

One-Pot Succulent Garden

These drought-tolerant plants start small and are slow-growing, so a shallow bowl-style pot is perfect for them. Plant five or six types in a range of shapes, then top the soil with small rocks, which help keep the soil cool and protect the roots. You shouldn’t need to water this planter much — succulents will make do with rainfall. Editor's tip: Leave about an inch between the plants, so they have room to grow.

Planter of Succulents

Succulent Container Garden

This bowl planter filled with succulents was featured in HGTV Magazine.

Photo by: Erin Scott

Erin Scott

Shown here: Blue chalksticks, paddle plant, echeveria, Aurora borealis kalanchoe, gasteria and zebra haworthia.

One-Pot Tropical Garden

All of these plants are surprisingly hardy, so you can grow them pretty much anywhere — just bring the pot indoors when the temperature drops below 60 degrees. They prefer a mix of sun and shade and moist, well-drained soil. Plant the elephant’s ear first, then fill in the rest of the pot. Editor's tip: If one plant gets too tall (like dracaena can), repot it at the end of the season.

Potted Tropical Plants

Tropical Container Garden

This fluted planter filled with tropical plants was featured in HGTV Magazine.

Photo by: Erin Scott

Erin Scott

Shown here: Bird's nest snake plant, dracaena, elephant's ear, cyclamen, Chinese evergreen and tricolor hoya.

One-Pot Herb Garden

This collection looks and smells great in the yard, and you’ll have herbs at the ready whenever you need them. These are all sun lovers that need water when the soil feels dry. Lavender and rosemary add height, while the other plants start out bushy and full, creating a lush look. Editor's tip: Gently snip herbs with clean, sharp scissors to avoid damaging the plants.

Planter of Herbs

Container Garden of Herbs

This container garden full of herbs was featured in HGTV Magazine.

Photo by: Erin Scott

Erin Scott

Shown here: Creeping thyme, Spanish lavender, rosemary and Greek oregano.

See More Porch Decorating Ideas

Next Up

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Take the work and worry out of watering flowers, veggies and herbs when you use a planter that gives plant roots the right amount of moisture.

Low-Maintenance Plants for Dorm Rooms

These succulents aren't just beautiful, they're super low-maintenance, too. Plant them in bright, hand-painted pots and they instantly become the perfect addition to an apartment or dorm room.

Winter Container Gardens

Dress up a few containers with cool-season flowers, vegetables and herbs, to keep the color coming as winter arrives.

How to Grow Sweet Potatoes in Containers

Short on garden space? You'll be happy to know sweet potatoes can be grown in flower pots.

How to Grow and Care for Calibrachoas

Whether you call them million bells or baby petunias, easy-to-grow calibrachoas may be small, but they pack a big punch of color in the garden.

How to Plant and Grow Marigold Flowers

Easy-to-grow marigolds add bright yellow, gold, orange and creamy-white color to gardens and containers from spring into fall.

How to Grow Potatoes in Containers

Irish potatoes are easy to grow in containers on a sunny porch or patio.

Where to Buy Vegetable Plants Online

It's perfectly acceptable to grow many veggies and herbs from transplants instead of seed, and you can even order some online.

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