Project Specs
| Project type | Flower bed border, 12 feet long x 2 feet wide |
| Lumber size | 2x4 |
| Lumber type | Untreated pine |
| Finish | Exterior water based latex paint; the same paint used on the shed |
| 2xEDGE Staple color | Forest Green |
| Tools | 16-ounce rubber mallet; compound miter saw (could also use a hand saw or circular saw); tape measure; speed square; paint brush |
| Edging install time | A few minutes for the edging itself |
| Total project time | About 2 hours including soil prep |
| Difficulty | Easy |
The Project
The goal was a flower bed border that felt like it belonged. Same paint color as the shed siding, clean lines, no plastic, nothing that looked like an afterthought. Painted 2x4 lumber anchored with Forest Green 2xEDGE Staples made that possible. Wood takes paint in a way plastic and rubber edging can't, which means the border becomes part of the design rather than trim around it. The soil prep was the hard part; the edging itself took a few minutes.
Project Steps
Step 1: Plan the flower bed layout
You'll want to measure the total linear footage where the flower bed border will be installed. This will tell you how many boards you need for your project and what lengths to cut before you open the paint can.
Step 2: Paint the lumber
Wood takes paint and stain; plastic and rubber edging don't. For this project I used untreated pine 2x4s and painted them with the same exterior-grade paint used on the shed siding (a water-based exterior latex).
The uniform color is the whole point of this project: when the edging matches the shed, the border feels like it belongs to the structure rather than sitting in front of it as a separate element.
Step 3: Prep the soil (while the paint dries)
While the paint dries is a good time to prepare the bed.
This strip of ground had never been disturbed. A pitchfork and spade couldn't make a dent, so a pick-axe did the work: about an hour of breaking up compacted clay, stomping clumps down, and raking the surface smooth. Because the ground was so barren, no weed barrier was needed.
Most installations won't require this much prep. If your soil is loose enough to push a screwdriver a few inches in without much force, you're ready to install. If you're working with dense clay, rocky ground, or other challenging conditions, here's what to know before you install.
Step 4: Install the edging
Edging installation required placing the painted 2x4s where the border will run, placing one or two Forest Green 2xEDGE Staples over the lumber, and tapping the staples into place with a 16-ounce rubber mallet. No trench, no drilling, no screws.
The bed is 12 feet long by 2 feet wide. The pieces of lumber on each end were short enough to be anchored with a single centered staple. This worked well given the dense clay soil which helped to hold everything in place.
Step 5: Plant and mulch
I dug holes for the mums, planted them, and spread organic cedar mulch across the bed. About two-thirds of a 3-cubic foot bag covered the space.
Project Notes
Using untreated pine outdoors
Pressure-treated or naturally rot-resistant lumber is the usual recommendation for outdoor use. Here untreated pine was chosen because I had it on hand and planned to paint it with the same exterior-grade paint used on the shed siding. The paint creates a moisture barrier and adds useful life to untreated wood. We'll see how long it lasts.
Short boards at each end
Standard guidance is two 2xEDGE Staples for boards up to 10 feet. The short end pieces of this bed were anchored with one centered staple each which worked because the dense clay soil provides additional resistance. On softer soil two staples might be the right call, even on short boards.
Paint as a garden design tool
Painting or staining 2x lumber to match or complement existing structures turns functional edging into a design feature. Plastic and rubber edging can't be painted; wood can. The uniform shed-and-edging color in this project makes the garden feel intentional rather than incidental.
Mulch
Organic cedar mulch was chosen here to add nutrients to soil that had never been amended. In this full-sun bed, mulch will keep roots cooler, retain moisture, and build soil quality over time. Two to four inches is the standard recommendation, and avoid piling the mulch against plant stems.
The Finish Line
The painted lumber and the Forest Green staples ended up performing exactly to plan. The edging wraps around the plants, framing them as a flower bed. The color connection between the shed siding and the border makes the whole thing feel cohesive. After all the hard work of siding and soil prep, the edging installation itself took just a few minutes.
Ready to Build Your Own Flower Bed Edging?
- ๐ Plan your layout. 2xEDGE How-To Hub: step-by-step installation guidance and project plans.
- ๐ข Calculate staples needed. Use the staple calculator.
- ๐ Order your staples. Shop 2xEDGE Staples and choose your finish.
Related Projects
Stained Wood Garden Edging: A 2x4 Installation Start to Finish
How to Build a Hexagon Tree Surround With 2x4 Lumber
2x Lumber Garden Edging: 10 Real Projects With Photos & Videos
2xEDGE Photo Gallery: Browse All Projects
Photo Credit๐ธ
Photos included in this article were taken by 2xEDGE and are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International.

