Decorative Indoor, Outdoor Planters & Cachepots - Delamere Design

Decorative Indoor, Outdoor Planters & Cachepots

Planters & Cachepots

From sculptural statement urns to subtle woven cachepots, our collection of planters is designed to bring nature into every corner of the home. These pieces are more than vessels for greenery—they’re styling tools that shape atmosphere, create rhythm, and connect interior spaces with the organic beauty of the outdoors. Whether you’re refreshing your living room with a tall ceramic planter or adding a textured basket to your sunroom, our curated selection balances utility with timeless design.

    Filter

      Planters and cachepots bring living texture, sculptural form, and timeless character to the home: vessels that frame greenery while doubling as design statements in their own right.

      Why Planters & Cachepots Matter

      More than containers, planters and cachepots act as anchors in a room. They introduce scale, balance, and natural warmth, creating focal points that guide the eye and soften harder edges. Whether used to display a trailing plant in a sunlit corner, a dramatic fiddle leaf in the entryway, or as stand-alone decorative objects, these pieces transform the feel of a space with effortless ease.

      At Delamere Design, we see planters and cachepots as essential building blocks: objects that are as practical as they are aesthetic. Each one is chosen for the interplay of form, finish, and function, ensuring your greenery is presented with care and style.

      Design & Atmosphere

      Every planter or cachepot adds its own atmosphere. Matte ceramics exude quiet refinement, terracotta warms with earthen tradition, and woven textures bring coastal ease. Shapes shift the energy of a room: tall cylinders elevate trailing greenery, low bowls create grounding moments, and oversized urns make sculptural statements.

      Our collection reflects this spectrum, pieces that feel modern yet timeless, rooted in natural materials. Clean silhouettes suit contemporary interiors, while artisanal detailing adds character to transitional and farmhouse settings. Whatever your home’s aesthetic, planters provide the bridge between furniture and flora, hard and soft, architecture and nature.

      Function & Placement

      The true beauty of planters lies in their versatility. They can serve as design punctuation marks or subtle supporting layers, depending on where and how they are placed.

      Living Rooms

      Anchor a sofa with an oversized planter filled with sculptural greenery, or place a trio of cachepots on the coffee table for texture and depth.

      Entryways

      Use tall vessels to frame the doorway and create a welcoming moment of greenery as guests arrive.

      Dining Rooms

      Low-profile cachepots make elegant centerpieces, holding herbs, succulents, or seasonal arrangements without blocking sightlines.

      Bedrooms

      Smaller planters add serenity on nightstands or dressers, introducing organic texture in spaces designed for rest.

      Outdoor Areas

      Weather-resistant designs extend style to patios and porches, blurring the boundary between inside and out.

      Placement is about rhythm: a single bold planter makes a statement, while grouped vessels create layered harmony. Varying heights, textures, and finishes gives depth to surfaces, while repeating tones ties the room together.

      Care & Longevity

      Every material responds differently to time and use, and caring for planters ensures they remain as beautiful as the day you brought them home.

      • Ceramic: Wipe with a damp cloth; avoid abrasive cleaners to preserve matte or glazed finishes.
      • Terracotta: Embrace natural patina; protect surfaces with liners to prevent moisture rings.
      • Metal: Use coasters or felt pads to avoid scratching; dry thoroughly after watering plants.
      • Woven fibers: Best for interior use; keep away from prolonged moisture to prevent weakening.

      Cachepots, unlike functional planters, are designed without drainage holes, making them ideal covers for grow pots. Simply slip your nursery container inside for instant style while keeping water management easy and surfaces protected.

      Style Spotlights

      Coastal

      Light tones, woven textures, and breezy silhouettes define coastal cachepots and planters. Picture abaca or rattan frames paired with sun-bleached ceramics, evoking a shoreline calm that’s as relaxed as it is refined.

      Modern Organic

      Sculptural shapes, matte finishes, and earthy tones set the mood. These pieces pair effortlessly with wood, stone, and linen, bridging raw textures with refined interiors. A tall cylinder planter in whitewashed ceramic becomes a minimalist focal point in a corner, while low bowls gather succulents with quiet sophistication.

      Transitional

      Timeless terracotta urns and classic pedestal planters ground the home in tradition. Their versatility allows them to sit comfortably in both rustic and contemporary rooms, reminding us that some materials never go out of style.

      Mid-Century Modern

      Sleek lines, sculptural forms, and retro-inspired finishes define mid-century modern planters. Think matte ceramic cylinders in mustard or teal, pedestal bases that echo vintage furniture silhouettes, and geometric accents that bring playful energy. These pieces pair effortlessly with wood tones, leather, and brass, adding a curated edge to living rooms and offices alike.

      Farmhouse

      Rustic warmth meets timeless charm in farmhouse planters and cachepots. Galvanized metals, distressed terracotta, and whitewashed finishes give these vessels a lived-in character. Perfect for kitchens, entryways, or patios, they complement natural wood furniture, linen textiles, and simple greenery like herbs or seasonal blooms. Farmhouse styles remind us that beauty often lies in honest materials and familiar forms.

      Everyday Styling Inspiration

      Consider the planter as more than a vessel: see it as a stage. A matte ceramic cachepot on a console paired with a stack of books and a hurricane candle creates a serene vignette. A woven fiber planter in a sunroom ties together seating and textiles, echoing natural tones. Groupings of three, small, medium, large, add rhythm to coffee tables or shelving.

      Change the contents with the seasons: fresh herbs in spring, succulents in summer, branches in fall, and evergreens during winter. The planter remains constant, the styling evolves.

      Conclusion

      Planters and cachepots are not just containers: they are sculptural elements that shape atmosphere, bridge design styles, and bring the rhythm of nature indoors.

      Our collection celebrates the breadth of these forms, from oversized statement urns to delicate cachepots, woven baskets to modern ceramics. Each one is chosen for its ability to transform a space, offering beauty, utility, and timeless appeal.

      Explore our selection to find the pieces that resonate with your home’s character: planters and cachepots that are as thoughtful as they are functional, as enduring as they are elegant.

      Planter & Cachepot FAQs

      A planter usually has drainage for live plants, while a cachepot is a decorative outer vessel without holes — perfect for slipping in nursery pots or faux greenery.

      It depends on the piece. Many are designed with drainage, while decorative cachepots are left solid. Each product description will specify, so you can choose what suits your needs.

      Some materials like ceramic or metal are best indoors, while fiberstone, terracotta, and concrete planters often work beautifully outside. Always check the care notes for guidance.

      Large planters act like furniture — they anchor corners, frame entryways, or balance sofas and credenzas. Pair them with statement greenery for maximum impact.

      Keep them indoors, away from direct moisture and sunlight. A quick dusting or gentle vacuum keeps the texture looking fresh for years.

      As a rule of thumb, size up 1–2 inches wider than the plant’s current pot. Oversized containers can hold extra soil, which may stay wet too long, so balance fit with style.

      Fiberglass, concrete, and fiberstone are durable for outdoor conditions. Terracotta can also work outside, though it weathers naturally and may patina over time.

      If water pools inside a cachepot, it can leave moisture rings on wood or stone surfaces. Use riser pads, saucers, or liners to protect your furniture while keeping the look seamless.

      Not always. You can simply slip the nursery pot into a cachepot, which makes watering and seasonal changes easier. Repot only if your plant has outgrown its container.

      Group in threes on shelves, mantels, or dining tables. Mix heights and textures for contrast, and repeat a tone or material across the grouping for cohesion.