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Color. This abundant border is defined by colorful plants, from the Japanese blood grass in the foreground to the rhubarb-red Sedum 'Autumn Joy' in the back of the border. This palette enlivens nearby plants and demands attention. When used with confidence, color can create important focal points in the landscape. It can signal where to enter and how to proceed; it also draws the eye and invites exploration. Successful use of color is often restrained, limited to a narrow but powerful palette, which is exactly what you see in this design.
by Mary-Liz Campbell Landscape Design
Views. When a landscape is oriented to take advantage of framed views and vistas, it feels doubly abundant. This gorgeous semiwild landscape is exposed to the elements and has a seemingly endless perspective. The cloud-filled sky is invited into the open scheme, lending a sense of drama. Everything is oriented outward, including the suggestion of a grassy trail leading to the world's edge.
by Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design LLC
Timelessness. What makes this border abundant? For one thing, no soil is exposed, thanks to mature plantings and a well-defined canopy and understory. I love the balance between each planting layer, from the ancient live oak trees overhead to the plump hydrangeas, to the heliotropes and ajuga that knit everything together. Several of the abundant design concepts I admire appear in this scene, including a sense of timelessness. The pergola is partially obscured by a healthy wisteria, which has entwined itself around the posts and beams. Imagine being seated there, away and unplugged — thoroughly embedded in this garden.
by Donna Lynn - Landscape Designer
Layers. Layering is an often-discussed design concept but one not always achieved. This landscape uses masses of prairie-inspired perennials and ornamental grasses, layered not in rows but in irregular planting swaths to evoke a deep, lavish border. Some of my favorite specimens appear, including Joe Pye Weed, black-eyed Susan, Russian sage and silver grass (Miscanthus sinensis).
by Milieu Design
While not all of us can have a decades-old garden, those who do are quite fortunate. Because planting trees first is, of course, the ultimate abundant design strategy. If you don't have a timeless garden, you can emulate this style by encouraging a naturalistic approach. Appreciate the architecture of your trees; encourage mossy rocks and ground covers to blanket the earth. Allow plants to grow to their full and inherent forms. Then give yourself a place where you can walk, contemplate and appreciate what you have. Here, the small section of green lawn is a soothing place of rest amidst the large conifers and broadleaf evergreens at its edge. Stunning!
Frenchflair
Intimacy. Intimacy feeds and nurtures the human occupants there. Narrow openings suggest privacy, like this almost-secret pathway between the trees. There's a hidden destination, and you're not quite sure where it leads. Even though the trees tower overhead, the perennial border below is filled with all sorts of alluring plants. The senses are enlivened, and one is drawn to the fragrant catmint, the soft-to-the-touch lamb's ear and the visually exciting alliums and foxgloves.
by Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design LLC
Focal points. This scene includes multiple abundant ideas — and all play together beautifully to make me wish I could be transported here. There is a timeless feeling expressed in the simple palette of native stone and green vegetation. The lovely twig bench placed at the turn of the path is a hard-to-ignore interior focal point. Layered textures provide interest, even though this is a landscape with mostly foliage. Generous in its gifts, this garden beckons visitors to enter — and remain in its presence.
by Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design LLC
Movement and ornamentation. There is something so perfect about this snapshot. I'm drawn to it time and again. The scene has two wonderful expressions of abundance. First, there's a sense of movement and energy conveyed by the masses of ornamental grasses on the hillside — they have a kinetic vibe that's dynamic, even if the breezes are still. Second, the ornamentation is sublime. A bowl placed on a pedestal. That's it. Effortless.
by Johnsen Landscapes & Pools
Movement, spontaneity and color. Abundance doesn't have to occur in a grand landscape. The spirit of an abundant garden can live on a patio or deck — expressed in thoughtful, well-arranged container gardens like those shown here.

Movement, spontaneity and a great sense of color overflow from these pots and make this a rather alluring place to be.
by Glenna Partridge Garden Design
Pattern. Shapes, forms and patterns communicate abundance here, giving visual cues about the vocabulary of this garden. There's an obvious grid-style pattern formed by the concrete pavers, comprising a simple geometric installation that gives this garden its intentional structure. The foliage and flower colors reinforce the modern, graphic message of this garden's design.

Abundance is an attitude of living in the garden, of cherishing plants, of combining art and horticulture, and of expressing one's highly personal style.

Next: How to work with spontaneity for an abundant garden
by Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture  

Comments

Marcy Thornton So inspiring! I continue to add elements to my landscape always trying for that abundance Debra demonstrates so perfectly. I especially love the chair at the end of the trail....so pretty.
5 months ago ·
appytrails Thanks for such a great article and photos!
I totally am of the "no dirt - anywhere" persuasion, unless it's to define a path made with walking stones (as seen on the left of my garden photo)
5 months ago · ·
Le jardinet Great article Debra and you know I am definitely a gardener and container garden designer who loves 'abundance'! Plus your book The Abundant Garden is still one of my all time favorites.
5 months ago ·
cender Thank you for such an inspiring article. I am heading toward new construction in a new growing zone, 11,000 ft in the mountains to the beaches of the southeast. I have saved most of your photos to my Ideabook.
5 months ago · ·
Deb Welch My backyard is a work in progress and looks different every summer. I'm constantly dividing and moving various plants to find the perfect home for them. We added a pond some years ago so that is the focal point and the rest is just icing on the cake.
5 months ago · ·
stacyleavitt Beautiful. Thank you for the wonderful inspirations! I have a large acreage with mature trees that we planted 30 years ago. I am unable to plant any bushes or flowers any more because we have a herd of deer who now love our yard! They even eat things that they aren't suppose to like. Any ideas? I love Matthew Cunningham and Mary-liz Campbell natural flow of plants.
5 months ago ·
kjk While it is beautiful I see a problem with the hydrangeas under the live oak. Hydrangeas like water and that will cause rot in the oak and eventually a dead oak tree. Not a good idea.
5 months ago ·
Grace Kyeyune Just wondering, would any of these flowers grow well in a tropical climate?
@Appytrails, love the blues! What flowers are those?
5 months ago ·
gardenartist As a textile artist and garden lover currently remodelling my English garden, Im inspired by your 10 concepts and refreshing style!
5 months ago ·
appytrails @Grace, those are hydrangeas. Although white hydrangea color can't be changed, by changing the pH of the soil, (adding aluminum sulfate, coffee grounds, other organic matter for blue, lime for pink) you can change the pink to blue and blue to pink. I happen to love the blues, and depending on the variety of the hydrangea, can get very deep or paler blues.
@stacyleavitt, I work at a garden where they actually FEED the deer!! By planting deer resistant plants and using organic spray, we are able to keep quite an impressive garden going. I would suggest try start planting close to your house with only deer resistant plants (I know nothing is deer proof) and staying on top of your spraying regimen, and you might be ok. I also have deer on my property... you can see the hoofprints every morning of where they'd been the night before. The hardest part is keep watch on the newly budding daylilies and get them sprayed before the deer find them first.
5 months ago · ·
Hazel Nyathi I find the 10 concepts by Debra methodical and a practical way of appreciating or even starting to think how to imporve abundance from one's garden. I have a mature garden which is over 40 years old and goes well with the rustic age of my small cottagery home. I appreciate the first owners who had such great taste and also foresight that the small trees they were planting then, will grow into giant flame trees, jo'burg gold connifers and some more that I cant name from the top of my head. I am now working on creating good ground cover and try to achieve some layering to ensure, l have abundance throughout the ' four seasons' of the year!!!. Happy Gardening plant lovers!!!
5 months ago · ·
Donna Lynn - Landscape Designer Debra, Thanks for including my photo. I agree - the look of abundance is appealing and if plants are carefully chosen and designed in layers, need not require additional maintenance.
5 months ago ·
nickvandekar I love the word abundant, and was hooked straight away, lots of great shots here of wonderful landlscapes. Thanks.
5 months ago ·
One Specialty Landscape Design, Pools & Hardscape In our company meeting we discussed how accessorizing a landscape or swimming pool can make all the difference between a good landscape and a stunning landscape. You could not be more right about how ornamentation can add the perfect touch!
5 months ago ·
runnergrl Gah! Gorgeous, all of them! And you just had to post this when it's 10 degrees outside! :)
5 months ago ·
dawnbmoorr We would have lots of deer in our yard if it weren't for our dog. She is not aggressive toward them but the deer must know she lives here. They pass through the back of our property but don't stay.
4 months ago ·
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