During the next few weeks, gardeners will be busy adding annuals and new perennials to the landscape. Let us review a few landscape design techniques to give pizazz to the garden.
- Red engenders passion, courage, power, wealth, motivation, and fame. Some like the energy that red brings.
- Yellow engenders joy, happiness, communication, inspiration, sunshine and optimism.
- Blue engenders imagination, calm, serenity, relaxation, compassion, and reflection. It is almost magical in creating the feeling of peace and tranquility.
- Green engenders harmony, beginnings, prosperity, nature, growth, and healing. Green is amazing in its ability to help heal physical and emotional pain.
- Orange engenders enthusiasm, joy, exuberance, interaction, fun, captivation, and sex. Most people have a love or hate relationship with orange.
- Purple engenders intuition, devotions, respect, peace, spirituality, and awareness. In all cultures of humankind, it has been the color of deity and royalty.
- White In the landscape, white is a dominate color rather than neutral. Thus, it is not the best team players when mixed with other colors. For someone who enjoys being in the garden at night, consider a white garden, also known as a night garden. In the moonlight, whites and silvers, and grays come alive, while other colors go to bed at sundown.
- Pink engenders love, sweetness, uplifting, happiness, tenderness, and enticement. This is one color where there is no agreement among people about the feelings and moods that it creates. For most, pink is either a love or hate relationship. Even different shade of pink may create different feeling and moods.
Warm colors work best when used in color sequence. For example, in an orange / yellowish-orange / orangish-yellow / yellow sequence, the orange would dominant. Use the orange at the focal point. In sequencing to the yellowish-orange, add at least 1/3 more of the yellowish-orange plants. Then, in sequencing to the orangish-yellow, add at least 1/3 more plant. And, at least 1/3 more plants again as it sequences to the yellow. This sequencing builds the landscape design principle of emphasis (dominance and subordination). Note this is not ¼ of each color!
Here at Butchart Gardens, daisy flowers are paired with red leaf cannas. |
Cool colors sequence best in color contrasts. For example 2/3s light blue and 1/3s dark blue, or 1/3s light blue and 2/3s dark blue. This one-thirds/two-thirds sequencing builds emphasis (dominance and subordination). Note that is not half of each.
Here the dainty flowers of yarrow are paired with the larger poppy. |
Effective plant combination – To create effective plant combinations, always pair opposites. For effective plant combinations, pair the fine with the coarse, the round with the upright, the short with the tall, the thugs with the dainty. So as you buy a plant, consider who will be its opposite mate.
For additional information, refer to Chapter 46, Principles of Landscape Design, in The Science of Gardening, or CMGGardenNotes #413.