Home + Garden Garden Container Gardens How To Create a Vertical Garden By Midwest Living editors Midwest Living editors Midwest Living's experienced editors create best-in-class travel, lifestyle, food, home and garden content you won't find anywhere else. We're loudly, proudly Midwestern, and we're passionate about helping our audience explore and create through award-winning storytelling. Midwest Living's Editorial Guidelines Updated on March 16, 2023 Trending Videos Vintage frames accent nature's own living artwork in these beautiful DIY projects. 01 of 10 Vertical Garden With supplies from a hardware store, a vintage frame, potting soil and succulents, you can make a vertical foliage display. Our step-by-step instructions show how to make this display, and we've got other examples of vertical gardens as well. 15 Spring DIY Garden Ideas 02 of 10 Step 1: Gather Materials You'll need moss, vintage vent or frame, wire, snips, coconut fiber, screws, drill, wooden box, spray paint, wire mesh, soil and succulents. 03 of 10 Step 2: Paint Vent or Frame A vintage portrait frame or heating vent, used here, both work well to frame your vertical garden. A coat of paint or polyurethane varnish helps prevent moisture damage. 04 of 10 Step 3: Make a Planting Box Create a planting box out of a durable wood, such as red cedar. Your wooden box should be about 4-5 inches deep with the same width and length as your vent or frame. Back the planting box with additional wooden planks for stability and drainage. Seal all the wood with a polyurethane finish. Then, line the inside of the box with wire mesh. 05 of 10 Step 4: Add Fiber Mat and Fill Before filling with potting soil, add a coconut fiber (or coir) liner to the planting box. The liners, which typically can be found in garden centers near hanging baskets, help prevent soil and water loss. Then fill the planting box with a potting soil that includes a slow-release fertilizer. The lightweight nature of potting soil, versus heavier soils like loam, is essential for vertical gardens. 06 of 10 Step 5: Attach Vent or Frame Using a drill or screwdriver and screws, attach the painted vent or frame to the planting box. 07 of 10 Step 6: Plant Fill the miniature garden with low-water plants, like succulents. In this garden, sedum's tiny green leaves brightly contrast blue-gray Echeveria. Hang and enjoy! Water as needed. 10 Top Succulent Plants for the Midwest 08 of 10 More Vertical Garden Ideas: Living Art This piece of living art includes silver-gray Echeveria towards the bottom of the frame with clusters of Sempervivum, sedums and creeping thyme throughout. Creative Containers for Succulents 09 of 10 More Vertical Garden Ideas: Succulent Displays These framed boxes serve as shelving for a selection of potted succulents. The painted frames are mounted on backless 4-inch-deep boxes. 10 of 10 More Vertical Garden Ideas: Picture-Perfect This lush vertical garden joins a vintage sewing box and a vintage picture frame, supported by the wooden legs of an old piano. The sewing box overflows with potted plants and the picture frame grows succulents and accents with gardening tools. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit