About this product
Full description
There's a particular Saturday morning ritual that summer cottage gardeners know well. Trug in one hand, snips in the other, wandering through the borders cutting sweet peas before they set seed, gathering a bunch of cosmos and zinnia for the kitchen table, snipping raspberries off the cane before the blackbirds arrive. The job calls for a tool with sharp, pointed blades and a comfortable handle — and ideally one that's pretty enough to feel a small pleasure to pick up.
These are exactly that. The Burgon & Ball British Meadow Flower and Fruit Snips — a precision tool for the gentler, more rewarding end of garden work, finished with a hand-illustrated meadow flower print on rich navy handles. Made by Burgon & Ball, the Sheffield toolmaker who've been making garden tools since 1730, and carrying the official Royal Horticultural Society endorsement.
Supplied to us through our partners at AllotMate, who curate proper, well-made tools for gardeners and allotmenteers who'd rather buy once.
What they're for
Snips are the precision tool for the small, frequent cutting tasks that secateurs are slightly too big for. The genuinely sharp, narrow stainless steel blades make light work of:
- Cutting flowers for the house — sweet peas, cosmos, zinnia, dahlia, scabious, ammi, anything you grow for cutting
- Deadheading through the summer flush — particularly the smaller-stemmed perennials where secateurs feel clumsy
- Harvesting soft fruit — raspberries, gooseberries, blackcurrants, strawberries, tayberries, anything where pulling damages either the fruit or the cane
- Snipping herbs — chives, parsley, mint, sorrel, anything fine-stemmed where a clean cut keeps the plant productive
- Tidy work in tight spaces — small stems amongst dense planting where you need to see exactly where the blade goes
- Floristry from your own garden — preparing stems for vases, bouquets and arrangements
Sharp, narrow, pointed blades give you the precision that bigger tools can't — the kind of cuts that don't crush stems, don't tear fruit, and leave the plant looking unbothered.
The design
The British Meadow print celebrates native UK wildflowers — meadow buttercup, ox-eye daisy, red campion, common sorrel — hand-illustrated on rich navy handles, turning a working tool into a small celebration of the British countryside. It's part of Burgon & Ball's RHS-endorsed "Gifts for Gardeners" collection, and matches the British Meadow gardening gloves perfectly for a coordinated set.
As a gift
The British Meadow design and the gift-ready, plastic-free packaging make these one of the loveliest small gifts you can give a gardening friend. Particularly thoughtful for:
- A new gardener just starting out — snips are a more useful first tool than secateurs for most people
- Someone who grows for cutting — sweet pea growers, dahlia obsessives, anyone with a cutting patch
- An allotmenteer who grows soft fruit alongside their veg
- A florist friend who appreciates beautiful kit
- A house-warming gift for someone with a new garden — particularly when paired with a packet of cottage garden seeds
- Mother's Day, birthdays, Christmas — pretty enough to feel special, useful enough to be appreciated for years
For a complete coordinated gift, pair them with the matching British Meadow gardening gloves and a packet of wildflower or cutting-garden seeds.
Specifications
- Blades: Sharp, pointed stainless steel — rust-resistant and holds an edge well
- Handles: Ergonomically designed in rich navy blue with hand-illustrated British Meadow flower print
- Endorsement: Royal Horticultural Society approved
- Packaging: Fully recyclable, plastic-free box — gift-ready straight off the shelf
- Range: Part of the RHS "Gifts for Gardeners" collection
- Made by: Burgon & Ball, Sheffield (since 1730)
- Supplied through: AllotMate
Looking after them
Stainless steel blades and a printed handle finish — properly cared for, these will last decades:
- Wipe the blades clean after each use, particularly after cutting damp or sappy growth (sweet pea sap can be a touch sticky)
- A drop of light oil on the pivot occasionally keeps the action smooth
- Dry them off after wet use rather than leaving them damp on the bench
- Store dry rather than in a damp shed or out in the weather — the printed handles will last best out of direct sun
- Sharpen as needed — stainless steel takes a sharpening stone well, though precision snips usually keep their edge longer than larger blades
If you're using them daily through the cutting season, a quick wipe between uses keeps both the blades and the print looking their best.
About Burgon & Ball
Burgon & Ball have been making garden tools in Sheffield since 1730, drawing on the city's centuries-old expertise in steel. They hold the official Royal Horticultural Society endorsement — a designation given to tools that meet exacting standards for performance, durability and design. We're proud to stock their range; British-made tools at this quality are increasingly rare.
A small thought: the difference between snips and secateurs is genuine and worth understanding. Secateurs are for the work — woody stems, established prunings, structural cuts. Snips are for the pleasure — flowers for the house, fruit for the bowl, herbs for dinner. Most gardeners benefit from owning both, and reaching for the right one for the right job.
What's included
Collection), in plastic-free gift packaging
Care and use
- A drop of light oil on the pivot keeps the action smooth
- Dry after wet use; store dry, out of direct sun (protects the printed handles)
- Sharpen as needed - stainless steel takes a stone well
Pairs well with
Other products from the potting shed that work alongside this one.




