Casa Garden

 

Feb 27 2010

The Pleasure And Landscaping And Corner Plants

Published by under gardening

If you have ample property on one or both sides of your house, extend the corner plantings so as to improve appearances even more. You might call this “adding living architecture” to the house in order to make it look lower and wider. With geometric figures and illusions created by horizontal lines breaking vertical lines. We want our homes to look low and wide because that gives a feeling of stability. Hence, as a general rule, the more we avoid sharply pointed plants the more attractive our planting will be. Tall, columnar plants and those of sharply conical form are properly used in foundation plantings only when the house has tall narrow windows and doors and sharp pointed gables. It is also desirable that if you use them, some of the plants native to the area be of the same character. Plants can become rather incongruous in different surroundings.

Concealed Front Door

Many modern homes are so designed or placed that the front door does not face the street but is tucked in around a break at one end. Here we try to make the entire house a pleasant picture as seen from sidewalk or street, but at the same time attempt to frame the front door as seen from some other point.

Placing Corner Plants

Plants at the corners should be placed either at a 45-degree angle from the corner of the building, or directly in line with the edges of the building, or a little off from the corner. Which one of these positions you will choose will depend on the point from which you wish your house to look its best. Many times the ideal solution is not just one plant but a group of plants which will make the house look attractive from more than one angle.

Desirable Shapes

Plants with a square or rounded outline and with distinctly horizontal branches are more desirable for the majority of foundation plantings. Upright or accent plants should, as already noted, be used very sparingly and judiciously.

One of the chief reasons for using an accent is to break the long low line often seen in the ranch home.

Kent Higgins has much more to say on the the subject of aspidistra elatior cast iron plant. Become acquainted with www.plant-care.com it’s visited by 1,000′s each day because of quality content in the world of outdoor landscape, flowers, houseplants and lawns.

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