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Unique Home Furniture, Home Decorating and Home Decoration Store |
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Bedding Plants A Border: bedding plants a border displays can be simple or elaborate according to taste, and the patterns may be given permanent form by being edged with small shrubs such as box or lavender.bedding plants a border OUT means putting plants in the garden for a limited period only, while they are able to contribute most to the display, and then replacing them with other plants. Spring bedding plants a border plants are those that make their display from early to late spring; summer bedding plants a border plants are those that are at their peak from early summer to early fall.
Beds can be filled with a number of plants of differing habits and, usually, mixed colors. Carpeting plants are used as a base planting, with taller plants employed to produce a second or third tier of flowers.THE BEST WAY of planning a border is to work with small groups of plants so you can concentrate on the relationship between the subjects, and so gradually build up the groups into a whole border planting. Choose plants with shapes that complement each other and which make an interesting and varied effect. You will notice that different plants create a variety of effects. Spiky plants, for example, are active and lead the eye upward and onward to neighboring plants, while gentle hummock-forming plants are calming and bland, and lead the eye horizontally along the border. At the same time think of height. Either use a tier system with tall plants at the back and shorter ones at the front, or use tall plants in the middle of the group to create peaks of interest, with shorter-growing plants leading the eye upward toward them. This will divert the eye and prevent it from traveling straight down the border, taking it all in at a glance. However, if tall plants are used toward the front of a border, they should be wispy enough to allow the eye to pass through them, yet substantial enough to break the line.
A variation in levels and a variation of plant heights all help to add interest to a border planting. The regularity of a border planted with tall plants at the back and low-growing ones at the front can be much more interesting if you introduce a few tall plants midway, to create some interest at intervals. Plants not only have form, they also have texture: coarse or fine, solid or filigree, and so on. Some are velvety soft to touch while others are hard and unyielding; some absorb light and some reflect it. |
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