Purple - The All-purpose Garden Color
What’s the first thing that comes to mind
when thinking about the color purple in the
summer garden? Not necessarily that it adds a
touch of coolness in what otherwise might be a
hot landscape. Nor that it evokes passion or
even a bit of regality. It is that purple is an
all-purpose color that works well with others.
Purple works in any garden scheme or
situation. That can't be said of many colors.
Mix up flowers in the pink-red scheme with those
in the yellow-orange range and a fight breaks
out. But purple looks good with both so you can
use purple as a bridge color to tie them all
together.
Purple as the New Neutral
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The red and violet of the sweet pea is an
exquisite combination. |
Call purple the new neutral, the one color
(besides green, of course) that works in any
garden, any time. It acts as a harmonizer
between warm and cool tones and will unite all
the colors in your garden.
Add purple to the summer garden with the deep
velvet tones of annual petunias and clematis
Etoile Violette, to pale shades of lilac and
wisteria, to name just a few beautiful purple
plants.
Combining Purple with Other Colors
Purple mixes well with gray, and some purples
are naturally set off by their gray foliage, for
example buddleia, caryopteris, cat mint,
lavender, globe thistle and Russian sage.
Purple looks especially crisp with white, and
adds a nice touch of contrast to a white garden.
Purple can have a different effect in the
garden depending on how it is used and the plant
combinations it is placed with. For a cooling
effect, use purple to offset pink, lavender and
white. In darker areas, purple tends to
disappear so use it against lighter colors, such
as heliotrope with pink and white impatiens or
Johnson's blue geranium scrambling under pink
roses.
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Wisteria's lavender flowers look striking
against a white fence. |
For a hot, tropical effect, try purples with
orange or red, such as salvia Purple Majesty
mingled with Pat Austin or Gingersnap roses, or
purple verbena bonariensis towering over orange
canna lilies.
A sensational color mix is purple-foliaged
plants with variegated or chartreuse colored
leaves, such as heuchera Crimson Curls with
helichrysum Limelight.
Because yellow and purple are complementary
colors, pairing them makes both colors appear
much stronger than they would otherwise.
Low Maintenance Purples
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Cut statice is good either as a fresh or
dried flower. |
Many of the lowest maintenance perennials are
purple. So a purple scheme is ideal for
xeriscaping, or dry gardening, which focuses on
using drought tolerant plants. Lavender, Mexican
sage, statice and certain kinds of flax need
little water once established.
Purple Looks Great in Any Light
And, finally, purple looks great in any
season under all kinds of light. Pinks and light
colors disappear in the summer, especially in
very sunny regions where they are overpowered by
the sunlight. Many summer flower colors look
great in the summer, but garish in the winter.
But purple flowers look good in any season,
whether the sun is high or low.
Whether you want to tie together some
disjointed colors in your planting scheme or
enhance others, take advantage of the color
purple’s ability to blend with all the other
colors in your garden.
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