Great outdoors

3 min read

COAST INTERIORS

Get out your brush and brighten up your garden while you wait for the summer blooms to show their faces, advises interiors writer CAROL BURNS

1 Love birds garden art from yardartuk.co.uk.

If the weather follows the rules, May should be the time for dipping our toes into outdoor living. And this month is the perfect time to get everything ready for a long hot summer – and that means spending plenty of time outdoors, even if the sun isn’t shining as we might like.

A garden designer once opined that our garden is probably our biggest room. Yet we don’t tend to give it the same time, effort - and often money - that it deserves. And like the kitchen, living room and bedroom, gardens are susceptible to trends in colour, furniture, floor coverings and even lighting and heating.

Worst of all, they get the wear and tear of our changeable climate every year – but don’t despair and work out the cost of yet more new garden furniture. It’s amazing what you can do with a pot (or few) of paint.

Most of the colour in your garden probably comes from the plants and flowers – and the most common colour is obvious. Green is everywhere you look, the grass, leafy shrubs and the setting for all those lovely colourful flowers.

For this reason, it makes sense to paint the eyesores in your garden green. Go further and create something in camouflage with a few different tones of green and some old sponges (it’s also a great messy project to keep any bored kids on half-term busy).

Stay away from white unless you want to get out your brush several times a year. It yellows, shows every speck of soil out of place and tends to showcase moss or algae. If you have to have those gleaming clean white planters to show off your ornamental grasses, go for softer chalky matt whites or consider a white stain instead of a paint.

2 Anthracite grey and greymond wood paint on Forest Garden Bar from thorndown.co.uk.

In today’s world, it is unforgivable to give your shed and fence a lick of creosote when you could be adding colour with the same effort - and paints are less of an assault on the olfactory glands. Try using different hues of blue and alternate the planks in your fence – or go more vivid for a deck chair vibe.

If you are painting a fence behind a flower bed, think about what planting will sit in front of it to decide your colour. Metallic paints can add a spot of reflective glamour on walls – or you can get outdoor mirrors to hang (make sure they are suited to outdoor use).

Brick walls and scruffy bits of patio can also be decorated using leftover tiles from the house – create a mosaic if you are feeling really crafty.

You can follow the same trick with wooden garden furniture. Colourful stripes can make even the most sorry-looking garden bench into a feature. If it’s too rickety to sit on,