Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell1/9Campion and ragged robin on the Resilience Garden, designed by Sarah Eberle.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell2/9An eyrie for wild children, in the Back to Nature Garden co-designed by the Duchess of Cambridge.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell3/9Children's playthings that adults find agreeable: a hollowed-out tree stump from the Queen's Sandringham estate.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell4/9A swinging rope knot for all ages, which has been demonstrated during the show by all of the Cambridges except Louis.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell5/9Planting in the gold medal-winning Resilience Garden, which flows from meadow to woodland, damp to dry.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell6/9Hanging planter made with steamed oak and earthenware by Tom Raffield, whose trade stand was planted by former Vogue art director, Sheila Jack.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell7/9Tom Raffield's hand-shaped standing planter (the Merryn), made in his studio surrounded by six acres of ancient woodland in Cornwall.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell8/9Sheila Jack's planting was inspired by the sub-tropical wilderness of Helston in Cornwall, where ferns, orchids and moss colonize every surface.
Photo: Courtesy of Jim Powell9/9Tom Dixon's "hyperreal" garden, part of his two-story installation, Gardening Will Save the World, within Chelsea's Great Pavilion.