Fabulous Foliage Plants
As a landscaper I really love foliage plants.
Foliage plants provide our gardens with beautiful shapes, forms, textures and colors.
Plants of one species like Buxus Sempervirons (English Box) have been used for centuries as hedges, while others add architectural form and elegance to our gardens.
The larger lush foliage plants enhance the colors of flowering plants, act as a perfect back drop to delicate ferns in a fernery, and look spectacular on their own in large pots or tubs.
You can use foliage plants as living screens, or to create soft backdrops of green or texture to more flamboyant plants for a dramatic effect. With the different forms, shapes, colors and textures of foliage plants you can create areas of strong focal interest.
A selection of plants with differing leaf color and textures planted in small informal groups can be used to add points of interest in a small garden, conceal unsightly areas, or to give background color and depth to a herbaceous border.
Silver foliage plants can add a mystical charm to a garden, or teamed with red, purple, blue or yellow adds a touch of excitement and drama.
The 'architectural' foliage plants, with sword shaped leaves , large palmate or feathery fronds, and different textures are well suited to modern architecture and the trend for minimal plantings and simple forms. Textured groundcovers mass planted, with either a strong single plant or groupings of the same species, can add sculptered shape to modern designs. Flowers don't usually feature in this style of planting unless the plant itself has a particularly strong architectural form like Strelitzia (Bird Of Paradise) or Canna.
Next time you plan to make-over an area of your garden, consider using some of the beautiful foliage plants available. You can dicover more about foliage plants and some great ways to use them at
All the best and happy gardening
Margarete
www.antspantsgardening.com
Foliage plants provide our gardens with beautiful shapes, forms, textures and colors.
Plants of one species like Buxus Sempervirons (English Box) have been used for centuries as hedges, while others add architectural form and elegance to our gardens.
The larger lush foliage plants enhance the colors of flowering plants, act as a perfect back drop to delicate ferns in a fernery, and look spectacular on their own in large pots or tubs.
You can use foliage plants as living screens, or to create soft backdrops of green or texture to more flamboyant plants for a dramatic effect. With the different forms, shapes, colors and textures of foliage plants you can create areas of strong focal interest.
A selection of plants with differing leaf color and textures planted in small informal groups can be used to add points of interest in a small garden, conceal unsightly areas, or to give background color and depth to a herbaceous border.
Silver foliage plants can add a mystical charm to a garden, or teamed with red, purple, blue or yellow adds a touch of excitement and drama.
The 'architectural' foliage plants, with sword shaped leaves , large palmate or feathery fronds, and different textures are well suited to modern architecture and the trend for minimal plantings and simple forms. Textured groundcovers mass planted, with either a strong single plant or groupings of the same species, can add sculptered shape to modern designs. Flowers don't usually feature in this style of planting unless the plant itself has a particularly strong architectural form like Strelitzia (Bird Of Paradise) or Canna.
Next time you plan to make-over an area of your garden, consider using some of the beautiful foliage plants available. You can dicover more about foliage plants and some great ways to use them at
All the best and happy gardening
Margarete
www.antspantsgardening.com

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home