A Vision in White
An urban garden offers a calm, sophisticated retreat with all-white blooms amidst silvery green foliage.
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With garden centers and nurseries greeting winter-weary gardeners with a riot of colorful flowers this spring, it may be hard to imagine the restraint of the Denver homeowners who asked landscape designer Alissa Shanley of b.gardening to create an oasis of white on their city lot. “There is something that draws you to the simplicity of an all-white garden, that makes you stop and look at the textures and shapes of the plants,” Shanley says. “White reflects light in a way that no other color would do. It's all very calm and restful.” With the entire front and back yards devoted to gardens—there is no grass here—Shanley structured her design to flow around an existing brick path and mature trees. More formal than natural in design, the landscape features a clean, linear look that gives it a certain sophistication. “The placement of every plant was very purposeful,” Shanley says. Rows of boxwood line the brick path, a small hedge of lamb's ear edges the rose garden and mounds of blue fescue line up in a row like soldiers. Shanley selected plants based on several factors: color (white and cream flowers highlighted by silvery, blue-green foliage); light (the garden has both sun and shade); Colorado growing conditions; and size. “We wanted big, round prominent flowers and large, showy leaves to make a statement and balance the substantial Tuscan-style house,” says the designer. She chose a mix of annuals and perennials that fit the bill—tall spikes of agapanthus, dramatic hydrangea blossoms, clusters of lush roses and the stunning impact of thousands of white tulips and daffodils in bloom. “The primary goal of this garden is to have something blooming at all times,” says Shanley, who planted the bulbs to burst into waves of early, mid- and late-spring flowers. As spring dissolves into summer, roses and long-lasting annuals come into bloom. Later, the agapanthus raise their tall, spiky flowers and the heady blossoms of hydrangea open up. “The magic of this garden is that it is always changing,” Shanley says. “One day you might notice the structure, another day the flowers draw your eye.” Although there are natural, woodsy elements, such as the mossy pathways that meander among the flowers, the garden gets a regular trimming for a more tailored appearance. “When I come back here to work, it is pure pleasure,” Shanley says. “If I could choose one place to live in any of my gardens, it would be this one.”
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