Add color and charm to your home with pretty window boxes.
These lush window box ideas are easy ways to add color and style to a house, from resting on sills to hanging from railings. All you need is the right combination of plants to create a beautiful, long-lasting display. Use our plans to create maximum curb appeal. Plant Wall Planters
Choose from our favorite window boxes to add to your home's exterior, and you can easily install them yourself with a few tools and some DIY know-how. With careful planning, your window boxes can bloom most of the year.
You can't beat coleus for brightly colored foliage. This mix of super-saturated leaf colors will provide a great view and give your home some eye-catching curb appeal all summer. If you can't find the exact varieties in this example, any mix of coleus with contrasting light and dark hues will work for window box ideas, as long as they tolerate full sun.
A. Coleus (Solenostemon 'Stained Glassworks Copper')—1
C. Bear grass (Xerophyllum tenax)—2
D. Coleus (Solenostemon 'True Red')—1
E. Coleus (Solenostemon 'Stained Glassworks Big Blond')—1
F. Licorice vine (Helichrysum petiolare)—1
One of the best window box flowers for sun is the petunia. These vigorous annuals only need a little space and will happily bloom all season. Here, soft pink double petunias look stunning spilling out of a window box, along with a darker pink verbena and chartreuse sweet potato vine.
C. Coleus (Solenostemon 'Frilly Milly')—1
D. Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas 'Marguerite')—2
A big window needs a bold window box; here's a great example. This container has it all: tons of texture, depth, and dimension. A mix of easy-care annuals provides colorful flowers and foliage all season long.
A. Bacopa (Silk 'Bridal Bouquet')—4
D. Shrimp plant (Brandegean Justice)—1
F. Daisy (Felicia 'Read's White')—2
G. Licorice vine (Helichrysum petiolare)—1
The sweet potato vine is a no-fail trailing plant that's a great window box idea for sunny spots. It's a fast grower that adds a lush, cascading look to any window box. There are several varieties, but a sure standout is this golden selection, which combines effortlessly with practically everything.
A. Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea potatoes 'Margarita')—2
B. Snapdragon (Antirrhinum 'Floral Showers Rose Pink')—2
E. Snapdragon (Antirrhinum 'Floral Showers Apricot')—1
Repetition is a foolproof window box idea to create a cohesive look. For a sense of flow and order, this 15-foot-long box is planted with repeating groups of ivy ball topiary, chartreuse coleus, sweet potato vine, and white caladium. As a bonus, the pale flowers and foliage seem to glow in the moonlight, so you can enjoy this combination longer into the evening.
For a brilliant burst of color, this window box idea hangs planters from your porch or deck railings. Mixing wispy purple fountain grass, bold croton, and trailing sweet potato vine provides masses of texture. Even though the box is tightly packed, each plant stands out, thanks to the varying shapes, sizes, and colors.
Here's another enchanting window box idea for decorating your deck. Because the pansy is a cool-season plant, you can give your window box a new look as the seasons change. Don't be afraid to replace the pansies with a heat-loving plant, such as blue angelonia, to keep the color show going into summer.
A. Pansy (Viola 'Delta Beaconsfield')—3
B. Nasturtium (Tropaeolum 'Fordhook Favorites')—1
C. Lobelia 'Riviera Midnight Blue'—1
Set your window boxes apart by incorporating elements of your home's facade. Here, yellow blooms match the home's exterior, and white caladium foliage coordinates with the window frames. Herbs such as thyme, oregano, and mint fill this window box, which hangs near an outdoor dining table.
This small container garden is overflowing with color and texture. Dark purple foliage from a sweet potato vine is the perfect partner for bright pink petunias and calibrachoas and accents this home's dark blue shutters.
A: Superbells Trailing Rose Calibrachoa—2
B: Supertunia Vista Bubblegum Petunia—1
C: Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas 'Blackie')—1
An all-white wall might seem as though it needs an explosion of color to dress it up, but you can create an equally impressive display by going with soft, subtle shades. Pink flowers are the perfect choice for adding cottage garden charm.
A: Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas 'Blackie')—1
B: Licorice plant (Helichrysum petiolare)—1
D: Verbena 'Aztec Pink Magic'—1
E: Wishbone flower (Torenia 'Summer Wave Blue')—1
F: Salvia 'Lady in Red'—1
Imagine reaching out your kitchen window and grabbing a handful of edible flowers, herbs, or vegetables. Edibles with ornamental appeal can do double duty in a window box. Select compact varieties, such as patio tomatoes bred for containers, so your plantings don't grow out of control.
A. Pansy (Viola 'Matrix' series)—3
B. Scented geranium (Pelargonium 'Rober's Lemon Rose')—1
D. Everbearing strawberry (Fragaria 'Ozark Beauty')—3
E. Bell pepper (Capsicum 'Purple Belle')—1
This lush window box idea also offers plenty of edible foliage and flowers to use in the kitchen. An assortment of herbs offers delicious flavors and aromas, while edible Johnny-jump-up flowers provide a splash of color among the greenery.
B: Flat-leaf parsley (Petroselinum crispum)—2
C: Lavender cotton (Santolina chaemacyparissus)—2
D: Variegated lemon thyme (Thymus x citriodorus 'Variegata')—1
Butterflies love easy-growing, sun-loving flowers. This colorful window box idea is full of bold purple and yellow blooms and contains a variety of textures that will keep pollinators coming back all summer long. Parsley is a host plant for swallowtail butterfly larvae.
D: Pentas 'New Look White' —1
Garden designers know the power of contrast. Whether you're contrasting colors, shapes, or sizes, plant an eye-catching combo of opposites to give your plantings more visual impact. In this garden gate container, the large, colorful leaves of red-orange copperleaf and variegated sea hibiscus reach upward, creating a pleasing contrast with more finely textured Spanish moss and trailing English ivy.
Playing with different shapes and colors of flowers and foliage adds excitement. Here, grassy-looking flax lily leaves appear to burst out of clouds of starry white zinnia flowers. The paler stripes of green on each flax lily leaf are echoed by trailing sweet potato vine, with the perfect lime green hue to contrast with the hot pink blooms of impatiens.
A. Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea potatoes 'Margarita')—2
B. Flax lily (Dianella tasmanica 'Variegata')—3
C. Zinnia haageana 'Star White'—3
D. Salvia guarantica 'Black and Blue'—2
E. New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens 'Sonic Sweet Purple')—3
The silvery leaves of plectranthus give this window box some chunky yet graceful texture, creating a dynamic contrast with the delicate-looking blooms of the begonia and lantana. Tiny leaves of trailing creeping Jenny spill over the side to further enhance the effect.
A. Plectranthus argentatus 'Silver Shield'—2
B. Dragon Wing pink begonia—2
D. Creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia)—3
No one's ever said a window box has to be an actual box, nor that it must involve a window. Get creative and express your window box ideas. For example, this rustic window box is comprised of a hen nester and vintage farm containers that are filled with shasta daisies, annual vinca, and dwarf gerbera daisies. Succulents, such as hens-and-chicks, echeveria, and sedum, along with trailing bacopa, round out the look.
Trellises are a great window box idea to give your deck, patio, or yard a little privacy. If you can't grow vines on your trellis, create a colorful display with a lightweight window box. This moss-lined trough is filled with colorful plants that, when placed strategically, give you a double dose of screening.
A. Sweet potato vine (Ipomoea potatoes 'Margarita')—1
C. Marigold (Tagetes 'Durango Yellow')—1
D. Geranium (Pelargonium 'Designer Cherry')—1
E. New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens 'Sonic Cherry')—1
F. Wax begonia (Begonia 'Prelude Scarlet')—1
G. Viola 'Sorbet Plum Velvet'—1
Try this playful window box idea when you don't have a window. This weathered box made of planking goes vertical with a vintage window frame attached to the back. The window frame is a perfect trellis for a tropical mandevilla.
Bonus: Attach this to a fence and insert a mirror behind the frame for even more appeal and the illusion of more space.
A. Mandevilla 'Alice du Pont'—1
gabions C. Aster alpinus 'Dunkle Schone'—3