I have been pouring over all the coverage of the Chelsea Flower Show that ended over the weekend…I soooo miss being able to hop on the tube and head over in person… As usual, there are lots of ideas and interesting tidbits to study and learn from and take away as inspiration. I am going to start with my own collection of favorite plant combinations. I have lots of other things that I loved, too, but I will pair them up for a series of post-show round-ups all week. Did you go to Chelsea? What was your favorite planting combination? ….from the pictures, these are the most interesting to me.
This is hands down my favorite. I love Scandinavian design, meadow flowers and this natural look created with Himalayan blue poppies, Black Barlow columbine and soft grasses. From the Naturally Norway Garden.
This combination of Verbascum, penstemon, irises, grasses, salvia, alliums, and a few others for the Victorian Aviary Garden is interesting on its own. I think it plays okay with the (somewhat not so nice) blue trellis in the background. It is very country casual to me, and it is quite the opposite of the gold-plated aviary-inspired structure. Sometimes, putting casual with formal can work — and sometimes, it just isn’t quite right…for me, this is the latter, but the individual elements are great. Do you think it works?
This combo is intriguing (tulips and either dill or fennel, I think) but I am not sure it is entirely achievable….not that I have the expectation that Chelsea displays the achievable, but at least where I live, there is no way that dill or fennel will be this big when the tulips are blooming….but nonetheless, the idea of chunky thick flowers like tulips floating in a misty froth of foliage is certainly interesting.
Cardoons, euphorbia, iris, fennel, phormium, and whatever that purple-leaved plant is….are a mix that I think lots of my clients would like. It is rich in gem tones (which, for some reason, I get a lot of requests for) and texture and is pretty sophisticated without being too complicated. The white border…well, it doesn’t do it for me; I rather prefer this mix with the wood tones of the upright. Would you agree?
That black leaved plant looks like a Perilla to me. #justsayin.
thanks Amanda…I wasn’t sure…
http://courses.nres.uiuc.edu/hort343/Strobilanthes%20dyeranus.htm
i think this is the purple plant- strobilanthes…
I like the drama of this planting- as soon as the dark purple and indigo iris color is gone it may quiet down a bit..
yea- or maybe a granite or pale green concrete edge…
*ouch* that white edging is just too bright with the plantings. I do love the plantings themselves, though.