Lottie Delamain

Director
Lottie started working life in textile design and spent six years living and working in South-East Asia working in fashion and homewares. On returning to the UK, Lottie retrained in Garden Design at the Inchbald School of Design, graduating with Distinction. Since then she has been working on gardens around the UK, from small urban spaces to historic estates and commercial developments.

Lottie is passionate about connecting people to the natural world and the underrated story-telling power of gardens. In May 2022, Lottie completed her first show garden at RHS Chelsea, A Textile Garden for Fashion Revolution.

She has been featured widely in the press, talks and chairs panels on gardens and design, and regularly writes for House & Garden. Lottie is a big advocate for the power of gardens to enrich our lives, and is a trustee of We Are Grow a charity working with schools & communities delivering programmes in sustainable food growing & outdoor learning. Her first book, published by Thames & Hudson is out in Spring 2026.

Ben Brace


Landscape Architect CMLI
Ben is a Chartered Landscape Architect, Project Manager and Horticulturalist with 18 years experience across a range of projects and scales.

He spent several years at the Royal Horticultural Society playing a major role in delivering the Key Investment Projects, most notably at RHS Garden Bridgewater. More recently he has worked on the delivery of high end, complex landscapes, with a focus on commercial development projects throughout London.

A self-confessed plant nerd, Ben is a champion of community green spaces, Ben loves the challenge of integrating green infrastructure into urban sites and enabling equitable access for all.


Fred Tiffin

Garden Designer
Fred came to garden design from a career as a documentary producer working all over the world in news, current affairs and sport. He retrained at the London College of Garden Design at Kew, graduating with a distinction and then began his career at Cameron Gardens before joining the studio in 2024.

He is an avid gardener, passionate plantsman and devout believer in the capacity of nature to cure the soul. He learnt his love of romantic, naturalistic gardens from his father’s rose collection and has a gimlet eye for good design. Today his designs draw on many years of travelling, having visited over 70 countries and counting. When he’s not in the garden with his dog Olive, he might well be found at Stamford Bridge supporting his other love Chelsea. 
L’Estrange  — an everlasting meadow for a forward-thinking menswear brand

L’Estrange is a forward-thinking menswear brand on a mission to help people to do more with less



To help them tell the story of their clothes, we designed an everlasting meadow for their flagship store in London’s iconic Coal Drop’s Yard. Flax, yarrow and cotton make up a tapestry of dried dye and fiber plants that are woven together to create a textural meadow.

We worked alongside Fred Rigby Studio who designed the shop along biophilic principles, transforming storm-stricken London Plane trees into planters, choosing natural wall finishes and texture to forge a connection with the broader environment across the store.

The garden is a daily point of connection and conversation for staff and visitors to the store 


The story of their product is articulated in the meadow the clothes hang above. The brand’s focus on renewable, sustainable and natural materials is demonstrated in the flax that is woven into both the meadow and their t-shirts.

The store was featured widely in the design press and there are plans to roll out a similar concept across future stores.

Sketches, reference images and stages ︎︎︎