What's Your Shed Style?
A shed can be more than just a place to store tools. It can reflect your style, and that of your home and garden
A garden shed chosen to match your home and garden does more than just declutter your yard. It can act as a backyard focal point for your landscape, provide an opportunity to express your personal style, and create an inviting destination for repotting, starting seeds and other garden tasks. Whether you’re adding a new shed or gussying up an existing one, take a look at these 10 ideas for garden sheds with real personality.
Contemporary
The modular design and horizontal wood slats give this shed a more modern look that would work well for contemporary gardens. This particular structure is designed to house two side-by-side storage units, each accessed by sliding doors. In front, the door slides open to reveal a potting station and garden tools.
The modular design and horizontal wood slats give this shed a more modern look that would work well for contemporary gardens. This particular structure is designed to house two side-by-side storage units, each accessed by sliding doors. In front, the door slides open to reveal a potting station and garden tools.
Around the back of the shed, the rear door opens to a unit for bikes, boat paddles and other sports equipment.
English cottage
Sweet as can be, this robin’s-egg blue shed sits perched on a small rise and is surrounded by flowering perennial beds. Give an existing shed the English cottage garden treatment by repainting it grey-green, blue or teal, adding details such as shutters or a scalloped trim, and planting a flowering vine, such as climbing roses, clematis and honeysuckle, to ramble up the side.
The climbing plants that can improve your garden
Sweet as can be, this robin’s-egg blue shed sits perched on a small rise and is surrounded by flowering perennial beds. Give an existing shed the English cottage garden treatment by repainting it grey-green, blue or teal, adding details such as shutters or a scalloped trim, and planting a flowering vine, such as climbing roses, clematis and honeysuckle, to ramble up the side.
The climbing plants that can improve your garden
Earth-friendly
Add a green roof to your shed to increase growing space and create an attractive focal point when viewed from above. Not all structures support green roofs. They require a sturdy structure to support the weight of soil and plants, plus a moisture barrier and drainage system. It’s best to work with a specialist to help design a shed with a green roof or update an existing structure to support one.
Add a green roof to your shed to increase growing space and create an attractive focal point when viewed from above. Not all structures support green roofs. They require a sturdy structure to support the weight of soil and plants, plus a moisture barrier and drainage system. It’s best to work with a specialist to help design a shed with a green roof or update an existing structure to support one.
Dutch Colonial
Designed to match the home’s front entrance, this picture-perfect shed features a hipped, shingled roof, curved arch over the entryway and a Dutch door painted the same shade of blue as the shutters on the main house. To personalise a shed kit, look for ways to add custom details that tie in with the home, such as painting it in a colour to match or replicating architectural details such as shutters or window boxes on a smaller scale.
Designed to match the home’s front entrance, this picture-perfect shed features a hipped, shingled roof, curved arch over the entryway and a Dutch door painted the same shade of blue as the shutters on the main house. To personalise a shed kit, look for ways to add custom details that tie in with the home, such as painting it in a colour to match or replicating architectural details such as shutters or window boxes on a smaller scale.
Country
Classic barn-red cladding, white trim and sage-green carriage doors turn this shed into an attractive focal point in a country-style landscape. To further a rural theme in a contemporary way, plant the area surrounding the shed with swaths of native grasses and wildflowers for the look of a natural meadow.
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Classic barn-red cladding, white trim and sage-green carriage doors turn this shed into an attractive focal point in a country-style landscape. To further a rural theme in a contemporary way, plant the area surrounding the shed with swaths of native grasses and wildflowers for the look of a natural meadow.
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Chic
To give a basic shed an upscale makeover, use building materials and architectural details that would normally be reserved for the main home. For example, this structure looks more like an elegant cottage than a tool shed. The architects used crisp, white board-and-batten cladding, a standing-seam metal roof, a decorative cupola and windowed carriage doors to give this shed some real stature in the backyard.
To give a basic shed an upscale makeover, use building materials and architectural details that would normally be reserved for the main home. For example, this structure looks more like an elegant cottage than a tool shed. The architects used crisp, white board-and-batten cladding, a standing-seam metal roof, a decorative cupola and windowed carriage doors to give this shed some real stature in the backyard.
Rustic
Keep wood cladding unpainted for a more woodsy look for your shed, and position the shed where it will be partially concealed under the boughs of trees or behind shrubbery. Constructed out of cedar cladding and a galvanised metal roof, this storage shed looks rustic but modern. Details such as the angled notch at the back as a modern interpretation of a bay window, and the use of galvanised metal for the construction, give the design a contemporary edge that would work as well in a woodland setting as an urban backyard.
Keep wood cladding unpainted for a more woodsy look for your shed, and position the shed where it will be partially concealed under the boughs of trees or behind shrubbery. Constructed out of cedar cladding and a galvanised metal roof, this storage shed looks rustic but modern. Details such as the angled notch at the back as a modern interpretation of a bay window, and the use of galvanised metal for the construction, give the design a contemporary edge that would work as well in a woodland setting as an urban backyard.
Colourful
Use a garden shed with a coat of bright paint on the sides, door, window box or trim to cheer up a plain corner of the backyard or tie in with colourful garden beds. Warm hues such as red, terracotta, orange and tawny gold look particularly inviting in colder climates or those with frequent rain and overcast skies. Vibrant blues, violets and lime green also work well as accent colours, and they can complement garden beds of almost any colour.
3 colour palettes to set your garden’s mood
Use a garden shed with a coat of bright paint on the sides, door, window box or trim to cheer up a plain corner of the backyard or tie in with colourful garden beds. Warm hues such as red, terracotta, orange and tawny gold look particularly inviting in colder climates or those with frequent rain and overcast skies. Vibrant blues, violets and lime green also work well as accent colours, and they can complement garden beds of almost any colour.
3 colour palettes to set your garden’s mood
Bring colour details into the interior of the shed to make it feel warm and inviting.
Urban
Tucked into a side yard, home, this 8.3-square-metre shed acts as a combination workshop, storage space and area to store recycling bins. The space-maximising design works to take advantage of every square centimetre, perfect for a small-scale suburban or city backyard. The homeowners used a mix of new building materials, such as corrugated Plexiglas, wood boards and salvaged windows to build a shed that both fits their needs and the tight space.
Tucked into a side yard, home, this 8.3-square-metre shed acts as a combination workshop, storage space and area to store recycling bins. The space-maximising design works to take advantage of every square centimetre, perfect for a small-scale suburban or city backyard. The homeowners used a mix of new building materials, such as corrugated Plexiglas, wood boards and salvaged windows to build a shed that both fits their needs and the tight space.
The roof and one side are constructed from corrugated Plexiglas, allowing plenty of sunlight to shine through and illuminate the workstation. This material, or an off-the-shelf skylight, could be added to a section of the roof of an existing shed to add more natural light to the space.
Steal space-saving design tricks such as taking advantage of wall space to hang tools and having areas beneath workstations double as storage. Here, the recycling bins tuck into the nook left on the exterior by the workshop table.
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Show us your garden shed in the Comments below. And if you enjoyed this story, like it, bookmark it, save the photos and share your thoughts below. Join the conversation!
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Steal space-saving design tricks such as taking advantage of wall space to hang tools and having areas beneath workstations double as storage. Here, the recycling bins tuck into the nook left on the exterior by the workshop table.
Tell us
Show us your garden shed in the Comments below. And if you enjoyed this story, like it, bookmark it, save the photos and share your thoughts below. Join the conversation!
More
See more stylish sheds and granny flats
For most traditional and cottage-style gardens, it’s hard to beat a classic chocolate-box garden shed with wood cladding and a shingle roof. If you’re going for a custom-made shed, select the pitch of the roof and gable details to match the home. Paint the shed the same colour as the house, or get a hit of colour in the garden by painting the shed a bright hue or adding a colourful bench outside. Details such as a Dutch door and potted plants surrounding the entrance make the shed all the more charming.