Get ready to make your own DIY glass dish garden flowers a fun craft idea for older children or adults. This summer, freshen up your backyard with Dish Garden Flowers. Summer will get turned up a notch when you learn how to make garden flowers out of old dishes.
Dish Garden Flowers
I think repurposing household items and turning them into outdoor decor for the garden is very artistic!
In fact, the older I get, the more I find myself astonished by art.
For example, dish garden flowers are becoming my new jam. I just so happened to stop at my mom’s house. I saw this dish garden plant that she made, and I loved it!
We love creating garden art such as this garden scavenger hunt and this handprint flower craft.
Materials Needed for the Flower
E6000 Craft Adhesive (Check Amazon’s Price here!)
Plate and Bowl
Metal Stake or Wooden Dowel Rod
Tip: Easily find inexpensive bowls or plates at a garage sale, goodwill, or repurpose old plates from home.
Repurposed Garden Decor
Learn how to make garden flowers made out of dishes in three easy steps!
First, you will glue the bowl to the plate using the E6000 craft adhesive glue.
Second, after that is dried. You will attach the metal stake or a wooden dowel rod to the plate’s back using the same glue.
Lastly, you will need to let it dry, and you will have a beautiful repurposed flower!
The most common dish garden plants would be glass plates glued together. This could be using European dishes, handmade dishes, and even creating a tropical dish garden made of fish-shaped plates.
Get creative and make all sorts of dish garden plants for your front yard, back yard, or garden!
- butterfly dish garden
- bloom dish garden
- peace and healing dish garden
- flowering dish garden
- dish garden with fresh flowers
- butterfly chime dish garden
After seeing the idea, my mother made for her garden. I can’t wait to try it, and other inspirations, DIY backyard art, and the Make Glass Plants were so cool.
Do you know how to care for dish garden plants?
The nice thing is it is effortless to care for dish garden plants. We have been able to leave ours outside, and this will be the second year straight with minimal care. I hope that helps. Enjoy making your new Dish garden flowers.