Using these design tips, enjoy bold, beautiful colors in a shade garden where your yard gets the least sun. Mix and match shade-tolerant annuals, perennials, and shrubs to make every inch of your yard a stunning getaway.
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Add a Shade Garden Path
A surefire way to improve any shady backyard is to divide and conquer. Here, a paver walkway creates a sense of purpose and destination among a mass of hostas and other foliage plants.
Repeating the terra-cotta color of the pavers with coleus helps integrate the path into the landscape and provides a secondary splash of color.
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Plant Less Grass, Especially in Shady Spots
Every lawn struggles if it doesn't get enough light. So instead of fighting a big patch of fading grass in your yard, keep only a small section of turf and make it a landscape element by surrounding it with a shade garden. Or give up the grass and use shade-loving groundcovers, such as heuchera and ajuga.
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Make Your Shade Garden a Retreat
Transform an unused, shady spot in your yard into a cool and stylish summer oasis by adding a bench and some flowers. Creating a shady retreat will give you the perfect place to enjoy a glass of lemonade on hot, sunny summer days. To create a personal garden retreat framework—without investing a significant chunk of change—consider using salvaged-landscaping materials.
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Use Plants with Different Textures
Make a bold, dramatic statement in your shade garden, even without flowers, by combining plants with different foliage textures and colors. An easy way to create texture combinations is by pairing leaves with opposite characteristics. Here, golden meadow rue is a stunning contrast to anemone, purple-leaf coral bells, and big-leaf umbrella plants.
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Plant Bright Colors
Shades of yellow and gold shine in the shade, so use them to illuminate dim spots. Here, golden Japanese forest grass complements a hosta and gold-leaf 'Chardonnay Pearls' deutzia.
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Plant Shade-Loving Groundcovers
Take advantage of low-growing groundcovers that crowd out weeds to make your shade garden easier to maintain. As a bonus, many types provide an attractive carpet of color that can add a living path to your landscape. For example, thisFor example, this golden creeping Jenny practically glows underneath a planting of blue hostas, purple coleus, and black mondo grass.
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Add Art to Your Shade Garden
Mix in fun, quirky garden accents to lend personality to your shade garden. A collection of silver spheres creates a focal point and adds light and charm to this garden. The colorful orbs floating in the water garden add even more interest.
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Pick Interesting Shade Garden Materials
Look past the plants and consider making hardscape elements the focal point of your shade garden. For example, a path mulched with dark wood chips becomes a stunning landscape design element when surrounded by white-variegated bishop's weed, ornamental grasses, or golden groundcovers. To help you get started, try creating a base map of your yard.
How to Make a Wood Chip Path
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Plant Flowering Shrubs
Perennials, such as hostas, are always popular for shade gardens but don't forget about the wide selection of flowering shrubs to pack your shady spots with color, texture, and height. Here, various azaleas and rhododendrons provide a big spring punch, and their evergreen foliage keeps the garden looking good in winter.
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Add a Water Feature
Install a stream or other water feature to give your shade garden extra-sensory appeal through the sound of trickling water. A simple fountain and recirculating pump are all it takes to make garden magic.
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Employ Architectural Elements
Look for fun, unique objects to fill your garden with interest. This garden features a series of round millstones, old barrels as containers, and various paving materials. They add a whimsical feel and are a great accent to the plants.
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Include Shade-Loving Annuals
Select annuals to create color in shady spots. Annuals are a perfect addition for a shade garden, as they bloom all summer long. Top varieties include impatiens, balsam, torenia, browallia, coleus, and iresine.
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Use Edging Plants
Edge your beds and borders with interesting plants and materials. Here, Japanese forest grass gives the border a stunning color and texture. Look for fun rustic architectural elements like terra-cotta pots or other objects that reflect your personality.
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Create Interesting Plant Combinations
Sprinkle your shade garden with a few stunning plant combinations to act as focal points. Here, a Japanese maple is a perfect companion for a couple of types of hostas and 'Gold Heart' bleeding hearts.
Hostas usually have a coarse texture, so you can't go wrong by mixing them with fine-textured plants.
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Plant in Large Numbers
Just about every type of plant looks better in large groupings than it does individually. Here, drifts of astilbe seem to tower out of a groundcover of golden sedum.
Planting en masse doesn't necessarily mean growing only a single variety. Here, several selections of astilbe combine for an eye-catching garden.
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Use Perennial Vines to Add Color
Grow perennial vines to add an extra layer of color to your shade garden. Smaller vines, such as clematis, are often happy to scramble up the trunk of small- to medium-sized trees. Bigger vines are ideal for covering a wall or creating a privacy screen.
Three of the best vines for shady spots are Dutchman's pipe, climbing hydrangea, and Virginia creeper.
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Pay Attention to Shade Garden Shapes
Go beyond color and texture to make your garden a showpiece. Use plant shapes to draw the eye. For example, a tightly clipped boxwood hedge contrasts with the looser plants they surround while echoing the smooth lines of a terra-cotta urn.
How to Make a Spiral Shrub to Glam up Your Garden
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Use Shapes in Shade Garden Hardscape
Utilize other landscape features to give your yard fun shapes. Here, rectangular pavers set in a geometric pattern contrast with a fringe tree's oval leaves.
Go a step beyond this in your yard by mixing materials for a path. For example, replace a few of the pavers and use bricks, wood rounds, or other objects as stepping-stones.
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Plant Shade-Tolerant Trees
Create layers to keep your garden interesting. Many shade gardens feature relatively low perennials, such as hosta, bleeding heart, and astilbe, underneath a canopy of tall trees. Bridge the gap by using tall planters or architectural features, such as pillars, or grow shade-tolerant trees and shrubs to provide your garden with various heights.
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Select a Shade Garden Color Theme
Maximize the power of color in your shade garden by choosing only one or two hues. This garden, for example, relies on tones of pink and burgundy from hydrangeas, impatiens, and Japanese maple foliage. With the wide range of shade plants available, you can create a theme in almost any color.
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