Gardening Magazine

7 Tips for Styling a Shady Garden

By Hollie Brooks @MiaFleur_home

Most of us are good at planting in the sun but shady corners are often neglected and this need not be the case as there are so many lovely foliage plants that need shade and quite a few flowering ones.

1. Pick the right foliage plants and you will have a lush, verdant space. Typically ferns, hostas and ivy love to be in shade. I’ve always loved hostas and they vary from 3ft monsters to dainty little miniatures and from white through lime green to dark and brooding. Ferns are delightful and again the range of colours and textures will have you spoilt for choice. Fibrex Nurseries are fern and ivy specialists and have a comprehensive selection.

Tips for styling a shady garden- MiaFleur

2. Flowering plants that like shade are some begonias, fuschias and heucheras. I picked up these gorgeous orange begonias as plug plants from B&Q and they are great for adding a splash of color. Heucheras now come in a startling array of colours and textures – purple, striped, lime green, frilly, spotty and, as they them are evergreen, they give all year round interest. Plantagogo specialises in them and holds the national plant collection.

Tips for styling a shady garden- MiaFleur

3. Vary the size of your pots so that your eye moves around the space – it’s more interesting to look at objects of different heights. The large pots stay in situ and I move the smaller ones about as the plants outgrow their pots and to add splashes of color in the different seasons.

4. Have a table and chair in your shady space so that you can enjoy a welcome respite from the sun. The table is a great way to create a vignette with garden accessories such as a lantern but also for smaller potted plants that would be lost on the ground. I’ve also used a chair as a display stand for a rather lovely fern.

Tips for styling a shady garden- MiaFleur

5. Use hanging wall planters and vary them seasonally. I’ve planted a heuchera in the metal wall planter which, being evergreen, will eventually cascade down the fence and create visual interest. The other metal wall planter has ivy and a trailing pelargonium in for a dash of color. I’m not sure how well the pelargonium will take to the shade but if not a trailing fuschia would look lovely in with the ivy.

Tips for styling a shady garden- MiaFleur

6. Change your display with the seasons. Some varieties of tulips like shade so pot a few up this autumn to get a spring display and when they are over fill up the pots with bedding for summer color.

7. Use accessories to give a feeling of an outdoor room and to make the space personal. A stone bust peeping through a fern or a cheeky bird perched on the ivy. Have fun with it and treat it as you would an interior space.

Stone Bust- MiaFleur

Jacqui x

7 Tips for Styling a Shady Garden by Jacqui Brooks


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