Posts Tagged Flower bed ideas


11 Flower Bed Ideas for a Truly Modern Home

A smattering of flowers and plants can give your outdoor space a springtime feel, especially during warmer summer months. Similarly, the pops of color and texture exhibited by flower beds can easily shake off the winter dullness from your home. This list of 11 flower bed ideas can help you transform your yard into a luxurious nature park. 

Modern home with beautiful lawn and garden

1: Combining Tulips with Perennials and Annuals 

Combining tulips with perennials and annuals creates a harmonious arrangement that comes back each year with little maintenance. Just space out your flowers to ensure that the tulips stand taller than the shorter, low-growing perennials and annuals. Typically, your tulips will return every year when winters are colder. There are multiple color choices to pick from, including white and black tulips. Overall, planting clear, primary tulips creates a festive effect in any mixed flower bed. Some companion options for a full flower bed include Daylily, Catnip, Bells of Ireland, and Salvia.

2: Side Yard Flower Bed for Tiny Spaces

You can leverage your sidewalk by planting pretty bizzy lizzies in a beautiful flower box and around the edge of a foundation bed. To bring out an inviting look, contrast their pink and white blossoms with deep green hosta lilies. Although hosta lilies are commonly planted for their foliage, they also bear tiny white, lavender, or violet flowers.

3: Reconditioned Tree Stump Flower Bed

If you have old tree stumps within your yard, why not use them for a flower bed instead of digging them out? Add a pelargonium in the center and surround it with deep purple bellflowers and gold and orange nasturtium with variegated leaves. Additionally, plant some bellflowers, ornamental grass, and pelargonium around the roots for an excellent balance.

4: Rustic Hollow Log Flower Bed Idea

A hollow log can make a perfect flower bed for your home. Simply shovel in some gardening soil and plant some cheerful flowers such as pink, white, and blue phlox, daffodils, red gerbera, and blue irises. The green sword-shaped leaves of these flowers will contrast with the softness and brightness of your blooms, creating an inviting flower bed.

5: Tile Deck with Built-In Flower Beds

If you plan to add a patio or deck to your home, consider one with built-in planters. You can have inbuilt planters made of tile to match your tile deck or opt for a wooden planter. Built-in flower beds can transform your deck into a delightful living space, especially if you plant eye-catching flowers such as pure white roses contrasted with butter yellow sundrops and purple lavender.

6: Raised Block Flower Bed

You can make a raised bed using pre-cut blocks and pavers to make tending easier, particularly for the elderly. Consider planting ornamental grasses, asters, turf lily, small ornamental trees, and chrysanthemums for added beauty. Besides, you can even add herbs or vegetables to your raised block flower bed.

7: Gravel Yard Flower Bed

Having a bed in a gravel yard allows you to indulge in various heights, textures, and colors provided by agave and aloe plants. You could even add ornamental grasses, rosemary plants, sedges. Consider using colored gravel to separate the flower bed from the yard and mulch to brighten the color of your pants.

8: Flower Bed with Clay Pots

Nothing beats clay pots in terms of convenience in organizing and maintaining flower beds. Arrange multiple clay pots half-buried in a raised bed of gravel and plant beautiful bulbs and party-colored tulips. You could also add plants such as daffodils and onions or garlic.

9: Wheelbarrow Planter Flower Bed

If there is an old wheelbarrow lying around in the yard, you could plant it in the middle of your garden and fill it up with bizzy lizzies. You could also create a background of false sunflowers and add more bizzy lizzies and daylilies in front. 

10: Vintage Suitcase Flower Planter 

You can repurpose an old suitcase to create an exciting flower bed. Simply prop the suitcase on a chair and plant attractive white and purple striped bizzy lizzies, magenta, white asters, or petunias. If you’re worried about filling your old suitcases with dirt, consider planting the flowers in containers first.

11: Antique Bed Frame Flower Bed

Making flower beds out of old furniture is the latest trending flower bed idea. You can have a headboard draped with gold, purple, or white flowers and pillows made of tiny privets. You can then create a mattress with grasses, flax, or violets and crown it up with a footboard made of white-flowered shrubs. 

Wrapping Up

If you’re looking to spice up your garden a little bit, these flower bed ideas could be a great way to do it. However, you need to remember that it takes some effort, time, and money to give your garden an extra splash. But at the end of the day, you’ll have a refreshing space to enjoy nature at its finest. Contact us for more information.

Discovering the Best Flower Bed Ideas for Your Home

Flower bed ideas are typically broken down one of two ways – by the color(s) that you’re going to be using and, secondly, by the kinds of materials you might use to bring your flower ideas to life (e.g., wheelbarrow flower beds). 

Monochromatic Flower Beds 

Monochromatic is a blend of two words – mono, which means one, and chromatic, which refers to color. Monochromatic flower beds are designed from blooms that are all the same color

A monochromatic flower bed can add a splash of color to your outdoor landscape, and the thing to bear in mind is that, although everything will be one color, you can use various shades and textures to create a stunning effect. 

Flower Bed Ideas

Purples and yellows are very popular variations when it comes to monochromatic flower bed ideas. 

With a purple monochromatic flower bed, you have a lot of beautiful flowers to choose from: lavender, sage, leather flower, hydrangea, and grape hyacinth. A walkway lined with lavender can be absolutely breathtaking.

A yellow color scheme is also a popular choice for monochromatic gardens. Yellow gardens let you blend in deep golden hues with paler flowers with an almost buttery accent. 

The Denver Daisy – a.k.a., Black-eyed Susan – and marigolds are great for adding deeper shades of yellow to a backdrop of a more mellow flower like the annual nasturtium. 

Keep in mind that blues, whites, and violet flowers will have a more calming effect in your garden whereas warmer colors like red and yellow can create instant excitment! 

Dichromatic and Ombre Flower Bed Ideas 

Dichromatic means two colors wheras ombre is a French word that means you’re going to be using a blend of colors that gradually blend in to each other. 

If you only want to use two colors, with varying shades of each color, then you probably want to look into a dichromatic garden. You’ll also want to consider using contrasting yet complementery colors to create the most powerful aesthetic look. 

If you’re feeling more adventurous, then an ombre flower bed might be the way to go. Ombre flower beds typically blend some of the cool hues and warm hues discussed above to gradually blend in flowers with a lighter hue with dark hues. 

An ombre flower bed typically starts off with a walkway made of flowers of a cooler, softer hue so that the eye gradually gets more and more captivated with the darker tones at the back of the garden. 

Wheelbarrow Flower Garden

Sometimes called wheelbarrow planters, a wheelbarrow flower garden can be made using a wheelbarrow that’s rusted-out, cracked, or has a broken wheel. 

The wheelbarrow, though, should have holes in the bottom to allow excess water to drain out. The big benefit to a wheelbarrow flower garden is that you can move it to an area with more sunlight.

Walkway Flower Beds 

As alluded to above, a walkway flower bed can be a wonderful segue into a captivating garden or a landscaping effect all its own.

Millions of homeowners have already beautified their homes with a walkway flower bed culminating with their front door.

Walkway flower beds actually touch on a difference with gardens in general – a walkway flower bed would be an example of a formal garden path with right angles and straight lines. 

That said, a walkway flower bed could open up into an informal pathway kind of garden (the second type) where you would have a meandering or curved path. A crescent-moon type of garden in the front yard would be an example of this second type.  

Which flower bed ideas appeal to you most? Contact us for more information.