The RHS Hampton judges set a strict criteria for the garden designers. Only one garden each year can win best in show, and the competition is fierce. |  |
The selection processPreparation for the shows actually begins the previous summer, when the designers submit a brief to the RHS about their planned garden. Show gardens are expensive to create and the designer usually seeks support from a sponsor. The brief is crucial, as the final garden will be judged on how well the designer has managed to fulfil their original proposal. All garden exhibitors are asked to complete a technical brief that outlines the: - theme and purpose
- soil conditions
- aspect
- hard landscaping
- special features
Judging criteria The weekend before the flower shows begin, as the designers complete their gardens, a team of assessors will make notes on each garden, for the judging panel. The gardens have to be finished by 8am on the Monday morning, when a panel of eight judge the gardens and award medals. The results aren't officially released until Tuesday morning. The gardens are judged on the following criteria: - Brief Scope, realisation, practicability - is the garden true to the original proposal? A garden with a simple theme can still be a gold winner if the execution is good, but innovative gardens are more likely to score better in this category.
- Overall impression Impact, originality, visual impact.
- Overall design Unity, balance, scale. Invention and creativity may also be rewarded.
- Construction Quality, finish, special features. Has the garden been well constructed? It's important to get the balance right and overuse of hard landscaping can count against the designer.
- Planting Design, colour, texture, association, relevance to the overall design, quality and finish. Plants must be horticulturally accurate and perfect specimens. Planting accounts for the largest number of points and is a crucial factor when judging.
Medals In theory, everyone can win something at Hampton Court. There are 21 judging groups, which apply to all the different sections of exhibitors, from show gardens to plants, fruit and veg displays, floral arrangers and floral exhibitors. More than 100 judges decide who wins the four grades of medal from Gold, through to Silver-Gilt, Silver and Bronze. Scoring for an RHS flower show gold is to get 75%; silver gilt 65%; silver 55%; bronze 45%. There are special awards too (see below). The floral designers also have their own section to shine in, with trophies for the floristry exhibits by professionals and the best arrangements by amateurs. Special awards- Tudor Rose Award for Best Show Garden
- Tudor Rose Award for Best Water Garden
- Tudor Rose Award for Best Floral Marquee Exhibit
- Best Small Garden Award
- Festival of Roses Marquee
- Window Box and Hanging Baskets
- Plant Heritage Marquee
Standard awards- RHS President's Award awarded by RHS president Peter Buckley for his favourite display in the Great Pavilion
- RHS Junior Display Trophy (best exhibit of a college)
- RHS Floral Arrangement Trophies (for best floral art displays by amateur flower arrangers)
- RHS Floristry Trophies (for best floral exhibits by professional/commercial flower arrangers)
- Show Certificates of Merit (for sundries stands - awarded for presentation not products)
- Certificates for junior displays
Occasionally, the judges may award a particularly innovative garden with the 'Most Creative Garden' or 'Most Innovative and Imaginative Garden Award', but this is not given out every year, only when the judges feel a garden particularly merits it.
 Every exhibitor is entitled to speak to a judge about the medal they have been awarded and ask for critical feedback about their garden.

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