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Designing Through the Midseason Garden Lull

February 7, 2026

By mid-July, many gardens lose their momentum.

Spring’s exuberance has faded. Late-summer perennials are still gathering themselves. Foliage is doing the heavy lifting, but the overall picture can feel muted, even tired. This isn’t a failure of planting. It’s a predictable moment in the garden’s annual arc.

Good design doesn’t panic (or give up!) here. It intervenes.

Work with what’s already speaking

Every garden has something holding its ground midseason—a shrub in bloom, a tree with strong foliage color, a plant that looks unfazed by heat. That’s your starting point.

Instead of importing a new idea, echo what’s already working.

When a single color is already present and confident, repeating it elsewhere creates coherence. The garden begins to feel intentional again, even if many plants are simply resting.

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about perception.

Tall green grass and a vibrant bush with bright red flowers boost the curb appeal in the foreground, while misty pine trees and other greenery create a lush, slightly foggy backdrop.
A red lantern hangs from the corner of a dark wooden building, adding curb appeal against tall pine trees and thick fog in the background, creating a moody, misty forest scene.

Choose one color and commit

Midseason is not the time for complexity.

A single-color strategy works because it:

  • Clarifies the visual field
  • Connects distant areas of the garden
  • Distracts from gaps, spent foliage, and transitions

Repetition does the real work. Containers placed throughout the landscape allow the eye to move easily, hopping from one moment of color to the next. The garden feels animated without being busy.

Scale matters here. A halfhearted effort disappears. A decisive one reshapes the whole experience so don’t be afraid to buy flats of something rather than just a few pots. Lean in it and make a statement.

Containers as punctuation, not decoration

An easy way to make a big difference is to think of containers as design tools, not accessories.

When places strategically, they:

  • Reinforce rhythm
  • Anchor entrances and thresholds
  • Buy time while until the permanent planting catches up

Use midseason containers less for novelty instead, thing of them as a way to holding the line until the garden shifts again.

A black planter with red geraniums and green leaves adds curb appeal as it sits in front of a weathered wooden wall with a small window.
Close-up of many thin, pointed, purple and green Japanese maple leaves overlapping each other, creating a dense, textured foliage pattern that enhances curb appeal.

Temporary moves are legitimate design moves

There’s a persistent idea that good gardens should look resolved at all times. But real gardens don’t work that way.

They move. They pause. They regroup.

Designing for midseason is an acknowledgment that gardens live in time. Temporary color, repeated with intention, is not a compromise—it’s a strategy.

When the garden stalls, design steps forward.


  1. Debbie Feely says:

    We have reds blooming, crepe myrtle, pennisetum and celosia, along with reds from Black Pearl peppers, Japanese maple, pomegranates and more. There are also violet blues, from the pale Australian bluebell creeper to ceratostigma plumbaginoides (distinguishing from the other plumbago more commonly grown here), Crystal Palace lobelia, and the blooms on the Black Pearl peppers which are a bit more purple. I like a third color, usually represented by California poppies but they are done now. I love your red accents. I enjoy thinking about things like this, and while I love the Black Pearl peppers, and the celosia and lobelia add nice color, I would like to add some hue of yellow for the late summer/fall season. Hmmmm…

  2. Love that contrast of red accents against the dark brown of the house. Beautiful and eye-catching. Red is one of my favorite colors. 🙂

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