The Prettiest Cottage Garden Flowers That Have Old-Fashioned Charm

cottage flowers
21 Pretty Flowers for a Charming Cottage Gardenbrytta - Getty Images

If you love old-fashioned flowers, plant a cottage garden! Originally, cottage gardens evolved from English country gardens, which were designed to be productive spaces where herbs, vegetables, summer flowers, and even livestock intermingled. Today's cottage gardens reflect that history with a relaxed, peaceful style that's just as appealing now as it was historically.

Cottage gardens have become more popular in recent years, perhaps because we're all yearning for a sense of nostalgia. When filled with old-fashioned flowers like roses and peonies, they may remind you of your grandma's garden. Classic landscaping ideas that feature winding pathways, trellis ideas such as rose-covered arbors, and white picket fences are the epitome of romance. Best of all, many cottage garden flowers are sturdy and easy to grow, both from seeds and seedlings. There are also many perennial flowers that come back year after year, helping to attract pollinators like hummingbirds and bees. Of course, you can plant pretty annuals, too!

Whether you live in an urban setting or have a large rambling yard, you can incorporate elements of the cottage garden in your own garden. Focus on combining colors, textures, and fragrances you truly love, from rambling roses to stately hollyhocks and even scented lavender. Even planters or a window box will work—there are no rules! Recreate this style and feel at home in an old-fashioned English garden of your own with our favorite cottage flowers.

Add to your cottage garden with these ideas:

Beardtongue

Penstemon plants, also known as beardtongue, are sun-loving perennials with bell-shaped blooms that will bring plenty of butterflies and hummingbirds to your yard when they open in early spring. With a variety of colors (pink, white, lavender, purple, red, or hot pink) and shapes, they'll also bring plenty of pretty dimension!

cottage garden flowers beard tongue
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Sweet Peas

As their name suggests, sweet peas will bring a wonderfully irresistible scent to your garden! The winged flowers come in a variety of colors and bloom abundantly in the early spring on tall climbing vines. Add a trellis or let them weave through your other shrubs. They're annuals that prefer full sun, but they won't thrive in hot weather.

cottage garden flowers sweet peas
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Pansies

The cheerful faces of pansies will make the most welcome addition to your cottage garden! With a wide range of colors and shapes, you can be sure these fast-growing flowers will fit right in with the rest of your blooms. Just know that they prefer full sun but cool temperatures, so you'll want to plant them in the early spring or fall.

cottage garden pansy
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Butterfly Bush

Who wouldn't want a plant named butterfly bush in their yard? The striking wands of flowers on these fast-growing shrubs come in fuchsia, white, purple, red or yellow. And you guessed it: The blooms are nectar-rich with a sweet fragrance, making the perfect landing pad for butterflies and other pollinators. They should bloom consistently through the summer season!

cottage garden flowers butterfly bush
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Hydrangea

Big and beautiful blossoms in an array of bright colors make hydrangeas a beloved choice for many cottage gardens! Better yet, they're extremely vigorous and long-lived, with blooms lasting throughout summer and into fall. To look their best, be sure they get full sun in the morning, followed by afternoon shade.

cottage garden flowers hydrangea
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Iris

With its tall, striking leaves and showy flowers in a multitude of colors, the iris will bring all the whimsy to your yard! They're easy to grow, hardy and will look spectacular in beds or behind borders. They'll flower from late spring to early summer and do best in full sun.

cottage garden flowers iris
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English Daisy

So classic and just as charming, daisies will provide the most beautiful backdrop for your yard thanks to their cheery flowers and low mats of foliage. This perennial will produce an abundance of blooms that attract bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. They take full sun to partial shade but won't do well in intense heat.

cottage garden flowers daisy
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Foxglove

Foxglove is another quintessential cottage garden favorite. The tall spikes of tubular flowers on these perennials make a striking accent in borders. Ranging from cream to pink in color, these tubular flowers attract hummingbirds.

cottage flowers like foxgloves
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Delphinium

Also called larkspur, these gorgeous cobalt blue flowers tower up to 6 feet tall above the rest of the garden with stately spikes of flowers in late spring to early summer. Deer tend to ignore this perennial, so it's a good deer-resistant plant. New cultivars, or cultivated varieties, include shorter types, as well as pink, white, or lavender flowers.

cottage flowers like delphinium
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Phlox

The delicate fragrance and bright colors of this cottage garden favorite make it welcome in garden beds of all sizes. This perennial blooms for weeks, attracting pollinators such as hummingbirds. New cultivars are more mildew resistant.

cottage flowers like phlox
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Catmint

As far as perennials go, it doesn't get much tougher than catmint. It will tolerate most soil types and is drought-tolerant once established. The silvery leaves with a minty-spicy scent and delicate spikes of purple flowers are beautiful in mixed borders or when planted in masses. Pollinators of all sorts adore catmint.

cottage flowers like catmint
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Ammi

Ammi resemble the roadside weed, Queen Anne's lace, but aren't as aggressive. Their wispy blooms look like lace, blooming profusely in mid to late summer. There are pink and white varieties, and they’re easy to grow from seed. But they do have a long time to maturity, so start seeds indoors in cold climates.

cottage flowers like ammi
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Hollyhock

These cottage garden perennials have tall stems with multiple flowers from spring to summer in shades of peach, pink, lilac, or white. They'll also self-sow readily.

cottage flowers like hollyhocks
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Perennial Herb

Many perennial herbs have attractive forms and lovely flowers that pollinators adore. Plant favorites such as sage, thyme, and chives, but add some lesser-known types, such as lovage, which has a celery-like flavor, and borage (shown here), which has pretty blue flowers that resemble nigella.

cottage flowers like perennial herbs
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Rose

Every garden needs roses and roses aren't as fussy as you think. Many different types, including climbing and rambling roses, look at home in a cottage garden setting, where they can spill over fences or arbors. Shrub roses are some of the most carefree types and will bloom from early summer to frost.

cottage flowers like roses
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Hardy Geranium

Also called cranesbill, due to the shape of the tiny flowers, this sturdy perennial is extremely cold-hardy and spreads rapidly. Some cultivars bloom in late spring, while others will bloom all summer long. They make an excellent low-maintenance ground cover, and pollinators love these pretty plants.

cottage flowers like hardy geranium
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Four O'Clock

These pretty tubular flowers come in many colors and bloom around 4 o'clock in the afternoon, closing up the next morning. They're technically a perennial but act more like annuals in most of the country. They also are super-easy to grow from seed and will self-sow and pop up again next year.

cottage flowers like four o clocks
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Peony

Peonies are the queens of the springtime garden. Their lush, full flowers appear in late spring, filling the garden with fragrance. There are many different types, but they're all worth adding to your perennial beds. Peonies are long-living plants that can live for up to 100 years!

pink peony in the garden
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Lavender

This stunning perennial has silvery foliage and beautiful spikes of purple or pink flowers. English lavender and lavandin, a hybrid that's more heat and cold tolerant, are reliable types to grow if you have cold winters. In hot and humid areas of the country, Spanish lavender, with its tufted flowers, tends to do better.

close up of lavandula stoechas, also known as french lavender, spanish lavender and butterfly lavender
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Love in a Mist

Also called nigella, this lovely annual is worth growing just for the name! But the starry, exotic-looking blooms and feathery foliage are another reason you should add this one to your garden. Chances are, you'll need to purchase and grow from seed because you'll almost never see this one in garden centers. But it's actually easy to grow from seed and will self-sow to pop up again next year if conditions are right.

cottage flowers like love in a mist
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Campanula

Also called bellflower, this beautiful blue flower are long-blooming and favorites of hummingbirds. This perennial also makes a lovely cut flower, and it also self-sows to make new plants. Some cultivars are pale blue, white or pale pink.

cottage flowers like campanula
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