Text and photographs ©Nancy J. Ondra 2008 The point of this month’s Garden Blogger’s Design Workshop is to indulge in some sumptuous color at a time when many of us don’t have much to celebrate in our outdoor gardens. But when you consider that browns are such a big part of our surroudings for a[...]
Red in the Garden – Part 2
– Posted in: Garden Design February 14, 2008In the last post on red, I talked about using red as the la piece de le resistance, as that startling, snazzy ‘something’ that will knock your socks off. In this piece, I want to talk about red as the conductor or framework of a composition. I think gardeners find red to be such a[...]
Let’s Hear It for Color Echoes
– Posted in: Garden Design February 11, 2008I credit Pamela Harper as the first to popularize the notion of color echoes, in her book entitled, of all things, Color Echoes. That simple but supremely satisfying way of creating color combinations relies on pairing plants on the basis of shared color characteristics. Everything is fair game: leaves, flower petals, pistils, stamens, thorns, fruit[...]
I Don’t Like White
– Posted in: Garden Design February 9, 2008So sayeth I, frequently. My reasons? For the first, I offer a simple equation: white + a mulberry tree + birds = purple-spotted white Seven years of purple-spotted white fences and garden furniture. Need I say more?
Sitting Pretty
– Posted in: Garden Design February 7, 2008Color is one thing my garden has in abundance. Of course I’ve got flowers in every hue, but my real interest is in using colorful foliage and making the most of color that comes in a can: paint. All my garden chairs and benches used to be painted white or green, but then I saw[...]