Choice Three: Monochromatic Colors
While it's a simple choice, a single color also can supply a garden with visual impact. In a monochromatic color scheme, you can keep all plants the same hue, or you can integrate different tones of the same shade. Plants can all be the same variety, as in this pink garden (of mallow and bee balm), but a good way to vary the vignette is to choose plants that offer the same bloom color but mix up the foliage size and shape.
Choice Four: Warm Colors
A plant also supplies a landscape with mood based on its color tones. For example, warm tones of red and orange have movement, bringing vibrancy and energy to landscapes such as this one filled with the textural foliage of bloodgrass, cordyline, and bronze sedge.
Cool Colors
Cool colors, on the other hand, create a low-key, soothing mood. Cool colors include blues, purples, and pale pastels, such as these pink petunias paired with white sweet alyssum and burguny 'Redbor' kale.
Choice Five: A Triad of Colors
Another cue from the color wheel is to select plants that are spaced equally apart from one another and combine them; it's called a triad. It's a trickier arrangement to achieve, but it's one that can definitely make an impact in terms of color and visual interest. Here, it's done with orange zinnia, Double Knockout roses, and Mexican sage.
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