Plant, water, enjoy: easy-to-create container gardens to brighten every corner of your yard from spring to fall.
Newly snipped mint leaves make a refreshing garnish for summer drinks, and this outdoor chandelier keeps the herb within arm's reach.
Wild colors are perfect for summer, so don't shy away from tropical annuals in bold, contrasting tones. This moss-lined hanging basket is planted with tuberous begonia, heliotrope 'Mini-Marine,' streptocarpus, coleus 'Golden Wizard,' and lobelia 'Blue Cascade,' with some trailing ivy thrown in for good measure. Plantings like this one are best with a foliage plant or two to help carry the combination through hot periods, when flowering plants may take a rest.
Well-planned window boxes will be dense with foliage even when flowers are scarce. Perennials heuchera 'Amber Waves' and 'Plum Pudding' blossom in late spring, but their leaves are hardy even past the first frost. The finely cut foliage of chrysanthemum 'Sheffield Pink' adds texture until it's overshadowed by a fall showing of dainty salmon-colored petals. Because the display is anchored around the lush greenery of cryptomeria 'Compressa' and dark-purple barberry 'Bagatelle' -- an evergreen and a semi-evergreen, respectively -- blooms are an added bonus.
This lush warm-season screen is created with ivy and lengths of chain between pairs of copper K-style gutters, which have flat backs.
Perfect for balmy climates but easy to move indoors in colder ones, this handsome container garden brings a touch of the Mediterranean to any sunny spot. The kumquat 'Nagami,' with glossy, dark-green leaves and fragrant flowers, is especially ornamental when bearing fruit. The aromatic underplanting of lavender and rosemary contributes texture, color, and visual balance, and these plants only grow vertically, so there's no obscuring the decorative band that circles the pot.
Overflowing pots (and a friendly dog) will welcome visitors to a covered porch. The space has been turned into a traditional shade garden, albeit one that can be rearranged on a whim. Shade border stalwarts like silvery Japanese painted fern, hosta 'Krossa Regal,' leather wood fern, heuchera 'Autumn Bride,' and foamflower 'Black Velvet' are planted in low terra-cotta pots; the first fern also appears in the hanging basket. These plantings won't need much more than water, grooming, and a periodic check for slugs. Unlike beds, they can be maintained while you sit on the porch, saving your knees and back.
This garden, 19 stories above a New York City street, would also be at home on a suburban deck or patio. It has all the trappings of its more earthbound relatives: formal, architectural elements (a pair of juniper 'Skyrocket'), fine-textured shrubs (hakuro nishiki willow and variegated redtwig dogwood), a big fountain of four maiden grass 'Morning Light,' and a generous sprinkling of annuals and perennials. The combination of evergreen and deciduous, woody and herbaceous plants provides year-round interest and structure.
Shady spaces are always inviting on sunny summer days, especially when they feel like hideaways. To bring the garden inside this pergola, two same-size spherical baskets are hung at different heights; soft cushions on the bench below invite passersby to stop and rest. The whites of dusty miller, helichrysum, and ivy geranium 'White Nicole' brighten the shady corners and stand in contrast to the varied pinks and purples of nierembergia 'Purple Robe' and ivy geranium 'Blue Beard.'
Made of tropical foliage plants typically grown indoors, this spherical beauty includes moon valley pilea, begonias, pothos vine, staghorn fern, a variety of other ferns, and philodendron. The effect is complex but easy to re-create. Simply choose a variety of textures and colors, and densely plant them in a steel-ball form. Offset the expense by taking the ball apart before frost, potting up the plants, and enjoying them indoors through winter.
Old-fashioned enamel milk pails, available at flea markets and farm-supply stores, have a rustic charm. Place sword ferns (Nephrolepis obliterata 'Kimberly Queen') or similar plants in 10-inch pots inside large buckets (left); consider ferns in four- to eight-inch pots for smaller pails. If the bucket is too deep, put an upturned plastic pot inside, and stand the plant on top. Remove plant to water.
A selection of three plants makes for just the right amount of variety; the arrangement feels balanced without being uniform or overly formal.
Easy-to-grow coleus, fuchsia, and moneywort create a rich palette in an attractive bronze-colored base. Religious Radish Coleus (Solenostemon scutellarioides 'Religious Radish'); Coralle Fuchsia (Fuchsia 'Coralle'); Golden Moneywort (Lysimachia nummularia Aurea)
A container filled with ripe tomatoes offers beauty and reward. Fortunately, because tomatoes adapt well to cultivation in containers, this delight is available to almost anyone.
Instead of the usual sphagnum moss or coconut fiber, line a hanging planter with canna or hosta leaves. Choose large, thick leaves from your garden or florist, and overlap them a few times to create a supportive base. Plant cascading annuals, such as these sun-loving Calibrachoa, and enjoy the sight of them brimming out of a better-looking basket. Though the leaves will eventually brown, they will become obstructed from view as the colorful annuals trail toward the ground.
Textural contrast adds life to this mostly monochromatic display, showing off shades of copper. Copperleaf (Acalypha wilkesiana 'Haleakala'); Toffee Twist Sedge (Carex flagellifera 'Toffee Twist'); Sweet Caroline Sweet Potato Vine (Ipomoea batatas 'Sweet Caroline Bronze')
All curves, spikes, and colors, this arrangement is set off perfectly by a traditional pot. Red Sensation Cordyline (Cordyline Australis 'Red Sensation'); Zinfandel Oxalis (Oxalis Vulcanicola 'Zinfandel'); Vancouver Centennial Geranium (Pelargonium 'Vancouver Centennial')
Steel utility boxes from the hardware store make sleek, modern pots. Choose a range of shapes and sizes. Turn so that the side with holes is at the bottom, and plant with low-growing succulents, such as Echeveria 'Black Prince' (left) and Sempervivum; top with gravel. (We used No. 2 grade grit.) For an exotic centerpiece, arrange several in a tray filled with grit.
These stately pedestals, made to fit over a chimney's flue, help prevent drafts and add a distinctive note to rooftops. Though pricey, they also make a grand spot to prop up plants. Choose antique or new pots -- find the latter at masonry yards -- and place a plastic pot liner inside each. (For fit, you may need to trim top of liner, then cut down the side and overlap edges.) We filled ours with purple cordylines, silver tradescantia, and rex begonia vine (Cissus discolor).
Sold in a variety of shapes and sizes at masonry yards, clay chimney flue liners cost less than terra-cotta pots. Use them to display a bevy of brightly colored plants, such as (left) Bouvardia ternifolia, Abutilon 'Dwarf Red,' Duranta erecta 'Golden Edge,' Coleus 'Sedona,' Ruta graveolens 'Blue Beauty,' and Colocasia esculenta 'Fallax.'
Don't miss out on fresh herbs (or pay a lot for them at the market) just because you don't have a big yard. Situate this compact herb garden in a sunny spot near the kitchen door for easy snipping.
Silver-edged fleeceflower and silver-white trailing dichondra are set off by dark-green flax and an unobtrusive textured gray pot. New Zealand Flax (Phormium tenax); Red Dragon Fleeceflower (Persicaria microcephala 'Red Dragon'); Silver Falls Dichondra (Dichondra argentea 'Silver Falls')
Houseplants brighten interiors during the cold months and add leafy green elegance to a porch or patio in summer. Here are Martha's suggestions for beautiful porch containers.
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