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3 ways to design containers for your garden

Containers for your garden 



Planting a container garden is an easier way to garden. Container gardening requires less time, space, and energy than planting in the ground. When it comes to planting products, the only limit is your budget. For gardeners, you can find pots of every size, shape, and material, with fewer regular utensils in garden centers, antique shops, and hardware stores. After all, a container holds the soil and provides drainage.


If you do not know how to design a container garden, feel free to enter. The fun in playing with containers is that there are many ways to use them. Also, the portability of a pot makes it easy to adjust the bad spot. Wherever you live, containers can simply add pizza, create color and shape against a bare wall and give more points to the landscape.



1. Create a vignette


A triangle always works


How plants can pack containers into vignettes. The triangular arrangement of the pots will give quick, happy results. In terms of design, a triangle has a dominant central element surrounded by elements of small height. This form is central to all art forms for good reason: it always works. A plant with colorful light-colored flowers (above) acts as the apex of a triangular compound, saturated with accessory elements placed slightly anteriorly and laterally.


Allow a pot to dominate



If the tallest element is placed on either side with the other pots on the back of the mixer, a container panel will quickly fall into place. Plant something in a tall container with the right command and it will dominate the group. If you have two containers of the same height, raise one on the pedestal to accentuate it.


Take it as far as you want


To expand the classic triangular panel, add extra pots. While there are no hard and fast rules about how many to use, it is easy to organize random numbers into a cheerful format. This intricate panel (right) forms an irregular triangle and includes pots of all sizes, a plant stand, and a peculiar sculpture.


2. Add focal points


Provide something to look at


The purpose of a focal point is to attract attention. If you are loaded in an area where nothing does this job well enough, a container will fill the void quickly. Containers have an advantage over ground combinations because they can be replanted and replanted with colorful, eye-catching plants. This combination provides a burst of spring color to keep things vibrant until other parts of the garden come to life.



Create synchronization in mixed plantings


The opposite of having nothing to see is being too much to see. Often on a mixed border, a lot can happen without knowing where to look first. Adding a focal point gives a sense of order to such scenes. The unplanted casket first catches our attention and helps us to feel the shade plantings around it.



3. Break the wall space


People are quite the busy background


The solid, repetitive pattern of a brick wall can be eye-watering. But when faced with green masses and colorful flowers, the motor lines recede. Green ridges (above) soften the dizzy lines of the wall and create rough views. Terra-cotta pots echo the warm color of the brick. The clusters of bright red flowers contrast with the dark orange and lush green, which enlivens the whole project.


The elegant structure stands alone against a hollow wall



An empty, undecorated wall will dominate an area with its monopoly and mass. One can take advantage of these features by using them as a backdrop to the micro-natural foliage that is often lost on a large scale. The photo on the left shows how simple steps can achieve a beautiful effect. Large pots of small trees are well foliage, evenly spaced with a complete hollow wall. The border of the brilliant ornamental grass reinforces the container plantings so that they hold themselves against most of the wall. The movement of small leaves and grass stands against the immovable wall, which makes what was an imposing scene breathtaking.

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