The latest trend in garden design goes on colorful flowers for a shift-on green-on-green look. If it is done correctly, a green-city quality can have a calming quality. But it's not quite as easy as packing your garden with ferns and hostas.
“If you do it badly, it can be slightly boring,” says landscape designer Paul Broadhurst. He is a great supporter of deciduous gardens, indicates that designing requires a little more nuances than a limit filled by flowers. “Because you limit what you see – just like a photo in black and white – you have to be considered more about it.” Here he and other design experts put the most important do and no green-city tariff so that you can create your own little green oasis.
• Paul R. Broadhurst is a landscape designer based in Seattle who heads Broadhurst + Associates.
• Molly Wood is a landscape designer and head of Molly Wood Garden Design based in Southern California.
• Katie Tayony is Chief Marketing Officer and Trend Spotter at Monrovia Nursery Company.
Photo: Erica George Dines
1. Add rustic materials
Natural colors and organic shapes open a green -dried garden without disturbing the meaning of serenity. Here a branch and a rough -wnish steps give you a path while you look at one with the lush landscape.
Photo: Caitlin Atkinson
2. Do not limit yourself to a green tone
“Green is a color spectrum, and it is important to apply the same principles of balance and the relationship in a very green garden as they are dominated in one of color,” says Tayony. “Make sure you get a variety by selecting some plants with different shades of green, from silver to deep emerald.”
Photo: William P. Wright
3. Add a splash of color
The contrast, which is crucial for a successful interior design, also applies to environmentally soaked yards. In this small Seattle Yard, designed by Paul R. Broadhurst, the pop of a simple red chairs awakens the whole landscape to life. “In particular, red can look beautiful with a lot of leaves,” says Broadhurst. But remember: a little color is enough – the focus should still be on the green.
Gabriela Herman
4. Do not stick to a height
“Don't choose everything in the same size,” says Tayony. “Instead, remember to create green layers: high shrubs or trees, medium -sized shrubs and ground covers.” These layers lead the eye up and let a courtyard soak green.
Photo: Erica George Dines
5. Don't go wild with colorful plants
If you limit your focus on green plants, it is easy to look forward to colorful leaves. While a few patterns of the landscape awakens interest, however, a fullness can lead to a chaotic look. “Use sparingly leaf away,” says Broadhurst. “It is an attention HOG. A garden with all kinds of imaginative plants with stains and stripes can look restless.”
Photo: David Tsay
6. Expand the green over the walls
“Don't be afraid of adding green to your hardscape,” says Tayony. “These living screens can soften hardscapes and help to define rooms.” A large part of the charm of this garden is, for example, from the sense that it is enclosed in green thanks to the Efeus that climb the walls.
Photo: Dominique Villon
7. Textures vary with devotion
“Texture is the key when drinking green,” says Wood. In this southern California court, she designed “large, fat green leaves like Pozsonia Urbicum And Giant Lagulary are a nice contrast to thin, vertical, strapped grasses like Miscanthus. “
Photo: Carson Downing
8. Do not get stuck at the 'Rule of Dreier'
Tayony encourages Gärtner not to start the common design principle of planting in trio. “Planting multiple a variety that you love can have an impact in a green separate garden,” she says. “But you don't just have to add three of everything. The number of plants that you use, add or subtract for each variety when you grow into the garden and find out what works.”
Photo: Caitlin Atkinson
9. Create a negative space
“It is really important to create a negative space within the green,” says Wood. Because while you want to feel enveloped by Green, you also want your garden to feel like a habitat, not as a jungle. It achieves a balance with modern hard caping and containers.