The Underdog Color That Fits Any Backyard

Imagine you could only select 1 color (besides green) to enhance your garden. I’d want to add gray. Now, that might sound crazy considering the possible rainbow of hues, but gray is the best complement in almost any garden. This silvery tone works beautifully with green, and there is a huge assortment of plants with gray foliage to choose from. Restrict yourself to a single bloom color and your garden might be very boring indeed. Add layers of green and gray, and your garden will be interesting all year.

Genevieve Schmidt

If I could have only three colors in my garden, I would incorporate an orange or a red into the mixture of green and gray. This orange-red color lies round the color wheel out of this steel blue-gray, making both of those colours stick out.

Debora carl landscape layout

Best Colours With Gray Plants

All colors of orange work well with grays and blue-grays, including this yellowish orange. Consider putting a photo of gray everywhere you would like an orange-colored blossom to glow. You’ll be surprised by the comparison.

Donna Lynn – Landscape Designer

Vivacious magenta is just another classic pairing with gray. The 2 colours bring out each other’s blue tones.

Wake Up Your Garden With Magenta Magnificence

Timothy Sheehan, ASLA

Lighter pinks, colors of maroon, aubergine and even lipstick red are also great pairings with gray.

Donna Lynn – Landscape Designer

Consider using grey against aluminum accents. The two metallic tones complement one another and give a cool and refined look to any room. Slightly aged aluminum paired with gray plants is one of my absolute preferred mixes in the garden.

SP Gardens – Susanna Pagan Landscape Design

Designing a Garden With Gray Foliage

Gray provides a nice contrast and grounds bigger plants when it’s set around the foundation of a green tree or tree. A second layer of gray in a slightly different colour adds more texture and thickness.

CLK Construction

In precisely the same fashion, a foundation of gray encircling a small tree divides a sea of green here. The comparison draws the eye instantly to the focal point of this planting.

Colors Of Green Landscape Architecture

Consider using gray as an edging plant to place off bigger yellow-green plants. The comparison makes a specified line and lifts up the eye into the focal-point plant.

Colors Of Green Landscape Architecture

Great Gray Plants

Lamb’s ear is a prolific, spreading bear of a plant, but I still love it for its gray tones. Despite its soft, fuzzy leaves and ability to flourish in harsh locales, the color is the very best aspect of this plant.

Stout Design-Build

Consider using mounds of H’s ear to break up banks of green along a walkway, or even try making a pathway completely from H’s ear. Can you imagine how wonderful that would feel in your feet? Watch out when they bloom, however — the bees love them too.

Grays are fabulous for a shady garden, particularly in lighter colour. A painted fern or gray-leaf astilbe will light up a shady spot in your garden.

Glenna Partridge Garden Design

Whether you’re adding a tiny Sea Holly to cheer up a cottage garden, brightening up shady corners with silver standouts or accenting a path with gray foliage, then this subtle hue can make a giant effect.

Working in the background, it sets greens in relief from one another, brings out trendy tones in various colours and serves as a visually interesting component of the garden even when nothing is in bloom.

I can’t say enough about the advantages of a couple shades of gray in your garden. Perhaps you could even locate 50. Wouldn’t that make for a garden?

More: 6 Beautiful Silver-Leaf Plants

See related

Bohemian Cottage and Vegetable Garden

Erin Waldman is not afraid of color. Her cheerful purple garden shed bright orange living room and bold turquoise sack signify her bohemian spirit and ability to decorate from the center. Her fearlessness with color and DIY projects has afforded happy consequences as her home continues to evolve. Although her house stands out from her Cedar City, Utah, community, her neighbours have adopted her eclectic style and have just made her adore her house more.

in a Glance
Who lives here: Erin Waldman husband Lannie Achord, kid Addison, puppy quad and cats Norman and Charlie
Location: Cedar City, Utah
Size: 2,700 square feet; 5 bedrooms, 2 baths

Sarah Greenman

Waldman and her husband, Lannie Achord, are committed to sustainability and develop a variety of corn, beans, peas, root vegetables, raspberries, herbs, horseradish and heirloom tomatoes in their garden. Their daughter’s purple playhouse matches the rampant larkspur.

Sarah Greenman: What made you fall in love with this house?
Erin Waldman: We were looking for a little more space following the birth of the daughter. Our property agent took us to the “wrong side of the tracks” so to speak, but when I walked in I knew this was the house. It had a fantastic irrigated garden space that has been in great shape.

Sarah Greenman

Waldman and her daughter, Addison, maintain a chicken coop into their garden, which houses four laying hens. All of these were called by Addison: Beauty, PoopFeathers, Chickadee and Speed Racer.

Sarah Greenman

Addison assisted paint the doorway to her father’s toolshed, in which the family stores gardening gear and house construction materials.

Sarah Greenman

SG: Inform me about the art you display in your house.
EW:
The Klimt-like painting has been performed by an art student from New York as part of a design. My most recent splurge was the encaustic painting by Fiona Phillips to the lower left. The framed blue painting over it is a first by Randy Rasmussen, along with the mask above the mantel was performed by Kevin Copenhauer, a costume designer in the Utah Shakespeare Festival.

I have so many talented friends who generously give us their “throwaway pieces” The best thing you can do to help your house is befriend a lot of artists.

Sarah Greenman

SG: Who inspires your personal style?
EW:
My mother. We’re very similar in style, and a lot of the things which I have came from her. She’s quite eclectic. She inspired my love of antiques. She sees something she enjoys and will arrange a place around it.

Art (left to right): “My Petunia Can Lick Your Geranium,” by Dolores Padilla, insect artwork by Micah Thompson, New Orleans town scene by Colisha; paint colours: Humble Gold, Sherwin-Williams and Copper Penny, Ace

Sarah Greenman

SG: What’s the biggest design dilemma?
EW:
I would adore my kitchen to become less of a galley and somewhat broader. After we pulled out the cabinets and removed a coat cupboard from the front room, it left us with a lot of drywall work. A friend helped us with the walls, but we needed to go back a few decades later to fix it. We did most of the work ourselves and learned where to employ out: drywall and floors.

SG: What do you want to do with your house next?
EW:
we’ve been saving up for a tile backsplash in the kitchen. We’ve had the tile chosen out for two decades!

Sarah Greenman

A vintage swag lantern and boudoir painting put a silent and peaceful tone from the master bedroom.

SG: What’s your proudest homeowner second?
EW: My 75-year-old conservative neighbor came and told me she really enjoyed all the color in my walls.

Sarah Greenman

Waldman paired a vintage embroidered pillowcase with a new comforter from Anthropologie.

SG: Did you make major changes to your house if you moved in?
EW:
We had been fortunate to have five weeks from the time we took ownership of the house before we proceeded in. I would place my daughter to bed and come over and paint till 3 in the morning.

Paint color: Aquarium, Sherwin-Williams

Sarah Greenman

One of Waldman’s favorite DIY projects is the tile wall in her toilet. She utilized Interceramic ceramic tiles and produced a mosaic mix of blue and yellow. She also set up a solar tube in here to create more light in what was formerly a dim area.

Sarah Greenman

Outside, a whimsical bronze sculpture by Dolores Padilla is framed by hand-stacked stone columns and welcomes people to the front doorway.

SG: Where is your favourite place to shop for home products?
EW: I adore secondhand, consignment, thrift and antique stores. I don’t usually enjoy anything mass produced. My favourite shop is Recycled in Cedar City. I would like items to be original and nicely crafted.

Sarah Greenman

Wife, mom, homeowner and Montessori school instructor Erin Waldman takes some time to enjoy a quiet moment on her front porch in a retro patio chair together with the family dog Lightning. A container garden of potted plants, overseen with a sitting Buddha, perches at the edge of the front porch. Waldman offers the following guidance to other homeowners: “Do what seems great and makes you happy. You’re the 1 residing in it.”

c: Do you have an eclectic house with a garden that is successful? Discuss it with us!

See related

Higher Ground: 6 Spectacular Landscapes

We’ve toured some magnificent landscapes here in over the past couple of years. From a garden on a Greek island into a bocce ball court overlooking the Pacific Ocean, by a small front yard in the Hollywood Hills into a grand estate in the Berkshires, every one these landscapes wow. Each has a special relationship to the home, the property and the increased context. Get tips for planting period from six special properties.

Carolyn Chadwick

This magnificent Greek garden on the island of Paros was designed to look as if it had always been there.

Carolyn Chadwick

Purple, blue, white and pink flowers, for instance, tall African lily and pink society garlic are spread between the home and the ocean edge of the house.

Carolyn Chadwick

There’s nothing like saving the best for last; this is the view from the house across the gardens into the Aegean Sea.

See the rest of this landscape

At Edith Wharton’s former home, The Mount, there are many different moods created by the landscapes. The nearer they are to the home, the more formal they’re.

A stone staircase surrounded by ferns takes visitors in the wooded entry to the formal gardens.

A lengthy strand lined in linden trees joins the two formal gardens.

The secret garden has a more rustic aesthetic than its counterpart. It is sunken, utilizes boulders and retains a green and white color palette.

See more of The Mount’s landscape | Tour inside The Mount

Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture

This stunning property on California’s central coast takes full advantage of opinions of Morrow Bay. It straddles the line between manicured and untamed, with native plants and careful color choice linking built bits to the unbuilt landscape.

Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture

A system of meandering paths connects the home to the estuary literally and figuratively (in its colours and sinuousness), and the layout provides stains to sit in isolation and enjoy the view.

Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture

Boulders mimic the shapes of the hills in the distance.

See the rest of this landscape

COCOCOZY

Blogger and house accessories programmer Cococozy has added lots of square feet into her living room by producing many areas to relax, do swim, visit, site, browse and nap in the front yard of her Hollywood Hills cabin.

COCOCOZY

Thick cushions, colorful throw pillows and a classy rug bring indoor layout relaxation out to the deck.

COCOCOZY

A huge dining table is a favourite spot for friends to gather on hot nights.

See the rest of this cozy front yard

Feldman Architecture, Inc..

These two cottages were designed to operate with the slope of a wooded Mill Valley, California, site.

Feldman Architecture, Inc..

Both studios, constructed instead of an attached addition onto the main house, tread lightly on the land, with a rooftop supplying the room to garden.

Know more about rooftop gardens and green roofs

Feldman Architecture, Inc..

The adventure of traveling from the main home to cabin was carefully considered; variables included slopes, substances, width and places to stop and enjoy the view.

See more of these cottages, including some peeks inside

Randy Thueme Design Inc. – Landscape Architecture

This house sits atop a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Aptos, California. A beautifully entry court provides a glimpse at the sea.

Randy Thueme Design Inc. – Landscape Architecture

As you round the corner, you find the bocce ball court in the foreground and the ocean beyond. There’s also.

Randy Thueme Design Inc. – Landscape Architecture

This big, troughlike fountain provides a visual boundary at the edge of this cliff.

See the rest of this landscape

More: Browse landscape design photos
Unusual Edible Gardens
Great Design Plant: Golden Creeping Jenny
Magical Garden Paths

See related