Growing up I was often given the chore of snipping herbs for the evening’s dinner.
Mini Garden Labels made from white clay and colored glaze have individually hand printed names (rosemary, heirloom tomato, cilantro, oregano, basil, and parsley); £2.13 apiece.
A set of 10 Aluminum Plant Labels that can be stuck into the ground or wrapped around a branch.
Herb Garden Stakes are made from raw, high-fired porcelain stamped with herb and vegetable names: lavender, cilantro, parsley, rosemary, sage, basil, dill, oregano, mint, and thyme.
The Seed Dibber and Label Set from Labour and Wait includes a wooden plant dibber with 1-inch increments, two sets of aluminum plant labels, and a carbon garden pencil (our favorite part of the set) that reacts with the aluminum of the tags.
These Terracotta Herb Markers are made in England and come as a set of eight labeled sage, basil, dill, chives, thyme, tarragon, rosemary, and parsley; $24.90 at Kaufmann Mercantile.
A set of these Copper Plant Markers with the copper plate of each label slightly tilted for easier reading in the garden is $18 from Terrain.
Pre-printed with names of either herbs or vegetables, a Set Of 6 Slate Garden Herb Markers is £9.50 from Garden Trading.
Available in sets of three or six, Green Slate Markers quarried in England’s Lake District come with an erasable China Graph white pencil; from £10.38 to £16.21 depending on quantity from Honister Green Slate.
This set of 20 smooth-surfaced slate markers of different sizes and shapes comes with a slate pencil.
A set of five Solid Oak Plant Labels is €4.95 from Quickcrop.