My daughter Rosie is five and has believed in fairies since she was about three. Not in a vague, general way — in a specific, detailed way. She knows their names (she's invented them), she knows where they live (the bottom of our garden, near the fence), and she knows what they eat (flower petals and dewdrops, apparently). She leaves small offerings for them on the windowsill. She checks for fairy footprints in the garden after rain.
When her fifth birthday came around, the gift decision was obvious in theory and difficult in practice. I needed something fairy-related that was genuinely good — not a cheap plastic set that would disappoint her, but something that would meet the seriousness with which she approaches the subject. I found the Fairy Garden Starter Kit by The Play Makers Co and it was exactly right.
What's in the Kit: Everything You Need
The kit is genuinely comprehensive. It includes a pastel tray to build the garden in, 200g of coconut peat expandable soil (which Rosie calls “fairy soil” and I'm not going to correct her), fairy seeds to plant and grow, a shovel for digging, a linen pinafore apron sized for young gardeners, whimsical wooden accessories including mushrooms, flowers, and a fairy door, and a set of three standing fairy figures with wings.
The accessories are the detail that makes the kit feel special rather than functional. The fairy door is made of plywood and has a proper door-shaped quality to it — Rosie spent a significant amount of time deciding exactly where in the garden it should be positioned, because the fairies needed to be able to get in and out easily. The mushrooms and flowers are charming and well-made. The fairy figures are the right size to feel substantial without being too large for the tray.
Birthday Morning: The Setup
I ordered through Altoe and it arrived beautifully packaged. On Rosie's birthday morning, we set it up together at the kitchen table. The step-by-step instructions are clear and well-illustrated — Rosie could follow them herself with minimal help from me, which was important to her. She wanted to build it, not watch me build it.
The coconut peat soil expands when you add water, which Rosie found genuinely magical — she watched it grow in the tray with an expression of complete wonder. She planted the seeds, arranged the accessories, positioned the fairy door, and placed the fairy figures. The whole setup took about forty-five minutes, which is the right length for a five-year-old's sustained attention — long enough to feel like an achievement, not so long that she lost interest.
The Linen Apron: A Detail That Matters
The linen pinafore apron is the detail I didn't expect to matter as much as it does. Rosie put it on before she started and wore it for the entire setup. She's worn it every time she's tended the garden since. It gives the activity a sense of occasion — she's not just playing, she's gardening, and she has the apron to prove it. That shift in how she frames the activity has made her more careful and more engaged than she might otherwise be.
Two Months On: The Garden Is Still Growing
Rosie's fairy garden is now two months old. The seeds have sprouted and are growing steadily — she waters them every other day and checks for growth with the same seriousness she brings to checking for fairy footprints. The fairy figures are repositioned regularly as the story of the garden evolves. The fairy door has been moved twice to better locations.
The imaginative play that has grown around the garden is the part I didn't fully anticipate. Rosie has invented elaborate stories about the fairies who live there — their names, their relationships, their daily routines. She tells these stories to anyone who will listen. She's started drawing pictures of the fairies and the garden. The kit has become a creative anchor for a whole world of imaginative play that extends well beyond the tray itself.
The Wooden Accessories: Quality That Holds Up
The plywood fairy door, mushrooms, and flowers have been handled daily for two months by a five-year-old and are in perfect condition. The plywood is well-finished with no rough edges, and the pieces are solid enough to survive being picked up, moved, and occasionally dropped without any damage. The fairy figures are similarly robust — they stand securely in the soil and have survived being repositioned dozens of times.
What I'd Tell Any Parent of a Fairy-Obsessed Child
This is the gift. If your child believes in fairies and takes that belief seriously, the Fairy Garden Starter Kit meets them at the level of their imagination rather than talking down to it. It's comprehensive, well-made, and designed for genuine engagement rather than a single afternoon of play. The garden Rosie built two months ago is still growing, still being tended, and still generating stories. That's the measure of a great gift.
- Complete all-in-one kit — tray, soil, seeds, shovel, apron, accessories, fairy figures, instructions
- Expandable coconut peat soil — grows when water is added, genuinely magical for children
- Linen pinafore apron — sized for ages 3–8, gives the activity a sense of occasion
- Plywood fairy door and accessories — well-finished, durable, no rough edges
- Three standing fairy figures with wings — the right size for the tray, repositionable
- Real seeds to plant and grow — teaches basic gardening alongside imaginative play
- Step-by-step instructions — clear enough for children to follow independently
- Suitable for ages 3–8 — appropriate challenge and engagement across the age range
Get yours here: Fairy Garden Starter Kit – Apron, Tray, Shovel, Fairies, Soil & Seeds
And if you're looking for more toys and creative play sets, these collections are worth exploring:
Gemma Whitfield is a primary school teacher and mum of one from Shrewsbury who takes her daughter's imaginative world seriously and looks for gifts that do the same. She writes about the toys and activities that have genuinely earned their place in her daughter's life — no gifted items, no brand relationships, just honest experience from a parent who pays attention.
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