Recipes for fairy trees, step by step (2024)

Enchanting miniature ‘tree’ gardens

10 Step by Step ‘Recipes’ for fairy gardens you can create around any tree in your garden, plus, a look into the deep foresty world of fairy house maker, Sally Smith and a fascinating video of how she works! If you have a tree in your garden, you can create a little fairy magic all your own!

Cheryl York‘s wise little ‘teacher’ fairy

Recipe:

  • 1 Fairy, sitting on a mushroom
  • 4 Gnomes on 4 stones
  • 3 Blue star creeper and a few Hosta
  • Two or three succulents and 1 Coral bells
  • Several flat rocks

Arrange the rocks around the tree to form some planting pockets and a flat spot for the figurines, tuck in the hosta and other plants around the roots of a tree, adding soil when necessary. Set up the gnomes and fairy in a flat central area. You’re done!

Di-Ellen Davenport’s fairy tree entry

Recipe:

  • 7 large rocks
  • 6 Hosta
  • 1 bag of Soil
  • An adorable fairy house
  • Crescent moon plaque

Hang moon plaque, arrange rocks in a semi-circle and pour soil within that circle. Plant the Host and nestle in the fairy house next to the tree. Magic!

Allison Reagan mulches her tiny garden

Allison Reagan, cleared an area around her tree and filled in with soil and mulch…it a blank slate!

First decide on a tree, then clear a spot, doing a little ‘house keeping.’ Rake leaves away and arrange some rocks if you have them. The plants by Mary Ann Matzer’s tree re primarily around the back side forming a background for her fairy village. Add smaller and smaller scaled plants as they get closet to your fairy house and accessories.

Sherry Law’s tree house garden

Sherry added detail upon detail to her fairy tree project. See how she did it, here: Sherry’s terrific miniature tree house

Barbara Stanley’s ultimate fairy tree

If you already have a fabulously mossy tree stump in your garden, do what Barbara Stanley did and add a wire fence, an adorable arbor and a fairy house, all in miniature. She planted lush Epimedium, common name ‘Fairy Wings,’ to the top of the stump, which cascade down the sides and back adding mystery. If your stump hasn’t natural holes or ‘too small holes or knots like Barbara’s, you can chisel or drill some out.

Anita Earnest creates a fairy abode in a tree

Recipe:

Michelle Cuneo’s ‘how to”

Trees make excellent fairy homes…all you need is a door into it! Michelle Cuneo first put down a layer of fine mulch to accent her fairy door,…then poured small stones in a semi-circle around an area in front of her tree. She then filled in with tiny, tiny gravel to form a miniature ‘patio. Adding smooth flat stones and gems formed charming paths for her fairies to follow.

Leslie Hagen’s tree stump redo

Fairies can enter Leslie Hagen’s tree at the bottom and climb several levels, peeking out balconies and windows and finally reaching the top floor. There’s even a spiral staircase. What an interesting and delightful way to treat a tall tree stump in the garden!

Sandy Bridenbaugh’s enchanted entrance that leads to…??

An old cupboard door of any size can be hidden amongst the ivy to create an intriguing entrance to a tree, like Sandy Bridenbaugh did. She leaves it to warp and weather.

Sally J Smith’s Fairy All Natural Houses

I’m so glad to have tracked down the source of this picture, below, that you may have seen online or on Pinterest or on a Fairy Garden site. It was created by Sally J Smith

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, an environmental artist, living in the Adirondack Mountains.

Sally started out as a watercolorist and illustrator, selling her artwork to book publishers, calendar makers and greeting card companies. She made a wonderful living from those talents,…until she lost her inspiration and creative spark! She was stuck!

Sally J Smith’s majestic mossy fairy mansion

Sally sought professional advicefrom an art coach for her ‘burn-out’ and was asked this question:

‘What have you always wanted to do but were afraid to do, afraid to try? What is really driving you that you don’t give yourself permission to do?’

She thought for an instant, then said she wanted to work outdoors, working in Nature, working with Nature, not looking at it,…but in it. From first working with outdoor ice sculpture, she eventually was ‘nudged’ by the fairies and began creating homes and habitats for them. Sally nestles her fairy homes into mossy niches next to trees. She grooms them and adds to the surrounding ‘grounds’ by making pools of water, mossy lawns, and by using pinecones for trees and shrubs.

Leafy fairy House by Sally J. Smith

Every bit of Sally’s creations are made from natural elements and once created and photographed, are left to the elements “for the Nature Spirits to enjoy.” Here are some of her methods and materials:

  • Roofs from bark, felted wool, overlapping leaves, mushroom slices or pinecone scales
  • Windows from twigs “glassed in” with ‘found and collected’ butterfly wings.
  • Carpets of moss
  • Bridges from bark with twig edgings
  • Feather fences
  • Poppy pod and acorn finials
  • Stone sidings and steps
  • Pine cone ‘trees’ and ‘bushes’
  • Flowers bring in color and are one of her favorite ‘accessories.’

No glue or wire is used when the creation is to be left in the outdoors, for clients, she’ll use resin hot glues and glass gems fro fairy homes meant to be kept indoors.

Shire House by Sally J. Smith

Sally thinks quite a bit about where she’ll place her fairy homes in the forest, and since no one will actually see her pieces, the photographs she takes become very important.

She calls the photographs she takes the ‘window people walk through, into the world that’s created for them in that moment.”

Flowery Fairy House by Sally J. Smith

How darling are these flower stepping ‘stones?’

ROADSIDE ADVENTURES: Sally Smith: The Fairy Queen

After finding Sally’s inspirational website, Greenspirit Arts, I was led to this video, a beautiful, foresty film showing how she creates her completely natural and inspirational fairy houses.

Skip to Minute 8:50 for fairy gardens or watch the whole show..

More on DIY Fairy Gardens:

How to: Creating a Flea Market fairy garden

Fairy gardens: Your DIY tips

Create a fun fairy garden with Jean’s clever new ideas

DIY fairy gardens: Our complete list of ideas

Gardening in Miniature: Create Your Own Tiny Living World

Recipes for fairy trees, step by step (2024)

FAQs

How to make fairy garden items? ›

Add soil or sand, and build your garden using found objects such as pine cones, sticks and stones, or miniature decorative items you've made or purchased at a craft store. Stick with a certain theme, such as a cottage garden, the beach or the woodlands—or not!

How to make a fairy garden around a tree? ›

Arrange the rocks around the tree to form some planting pockets and a flat spot for the figurines, tuck in the hosta and other plants around the roots of a tree, adding soil when necessary. Set up the gnomes and fairy in a flat central area. You're done!

How to make a succulent fairy garden? ›

Fill your container with a potting mix formulated for cacti and succulents. Water sparingly, allowing the soil to completely dry out before watering again. Take care not to wet the leaves of your succulents. Place your miniature, succulent fairy garden in an area that receives plenty of sunlight.

How do you make a whimsical garden? ›

Start by repurposing everyday items into charming garden features. Old teacups become whimsical planters, while vintage ladders serve as enchanting trellises. Embrace your artistic side by painting rocks with vibrant colors or crafting DIY fairy houses to nestle among the greenery.

Which two things do most fairy gardens have? ›

“The basic elements of a fairy garden are miniature plants, fairies and their friends [like dogs, cats and ducks] and accessories,” says Bawden-Davis. “Accessories run the gamut, from tiny watering pails to little rakes and hoes to birdbaths, benches, gazebos and gazing globes.

What does a fairy garden symbolize? ›

In literature and art, garden fairies serve as powerful symbols of innocence, wonder, and the magic of the natural world. Their presence in stories and paintings often evokes a sense of nostalgia for childhood, when the boundary between reality and imagination was more fluid.

What makes a tree a fairy tree? ›

“A Fairy tree is usually a Hawthorn or an Ash tree but what makes them stand out from any other tree of its kind is their location. A Fairy tree is found standing by itself in a centre of a field or on the side of the road and they're quite easy to spot, if you know what you are looking for.

How to make fairy lights in a tree? ›

Wrap the fairy lights around the trunk, moving upward in a winding motion. Use your hand by placing 4 fingers in between for uniform spacing between lights. Use smaller stringed fairy lights for smaller trees with small branches.

How to build a simple fairy house? ›

To make a fairy house, start by decorating a piece of cardboard or scrap wood with pebbles, moss, or grass to use as a base for your house. Next, stack twigs like Lincoln logs to make walls for the house, using wood glue to keep them together. You'll also want to leave a hole for the door.

Do you use real plants in a fairy garden? ›

What Plants to use in a Fairy Garden? The best plants for a fairy garden are fairy-sized, so think miniature alpines, mosses and flowers. Fairy Gardening is such a fun hobby and one you can enjoy with kids too, but it's really important to select the right plants when starting off.

Do fairy gardens need drainage? ›

The other essential consideration with a container is drainage. Ideally, there should be a few drainage holes that are standard in most gardening pots. If there are no holes because you have gone with the wheelbarrow option, you will first need to line the bottom with gravel or the broken shards of a terracotta pot.

What is a indoor fairy garden? ›

Fairy gardens are miniature gardens constructed of diminutive plants and tiny accessories designed to lure fairies. They can be outside gardens with in-ground plants, or they can be mini container gardens intended mainly for indoors – at least part of the time.

References

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