20 Ways to Work White Magic in Your Gainesville Lawn
Like a perfect white shirt or a string of pearls, white landscapes exude a timeless charm. They're classically elegant and never seem to go out of style. If you're looking to spruce up your Gainesville Landscape or try something new this year, it isn't hard to add a touch of white with flowers, fences and other elements for some oh-so-sweet cottage style, to create a soothing backyard retreat or dress up your front yard.
Wallace Landscape Associates
1. Welcome with white. This beautiful Gainesville Garden entrance is balanced with a white flowering dogwood (Cornus kousa, zones 5 to 8) and framed by a split-rail fence. The look is formal but not stuffy, and the fence matches the style and scale of the clapboard buildings.
Denise Dering Design
2. Install a white fence for curb appeal. A low fence like this is both playful and proper. Dressed with Gainesville Florida roses and fronted with mounding perennials, it makes a welcome entry from the street or sidewalk. The fence can be strung with greens and lights in the winter season. Your Gainesville Lawn will never look better.
D'Urso Landscape Design
3. Screen a driveway with white pickets. This curved picket fence mitigates unwanted views of cars that may be parked in the driveway, giving the yard a cohesive look. A mix of sun-loving plants softens the hardscape along its exterior.
Milieu Design
4. Top white fence panels with lattice. Let's face it, white fencing can be hard on the eye, so soften it with lattice panels like these. Note the sweet autumn clematis (Clematis terniflora, zones 5 to 9), a great white flowering vine, on the brick pergola.
Frederick + Frederick Architects
5. Mark an entrance. Arbors make great focal points. As an alternative to traditional wood, which needs regular upkeep, look for structures made from a white composite material, like Azek, for easy care and durability. Experiment with scented roses and string white lights fornighttime garden wayfinding.
Deborah Cerbone Associates, Inc.
6. Build a white pergola. There's really nothing like a well-built pergola to offer shade and respite outdoors. If your Gainesville home is white, consider a matching pergola — a bonus room from which to enjoy the view. Flank it with silver and white plants, framed in a classic boxwood parterre for classical elegance.
Derviss Design
7. Frame a garden room. White climbing roses on an arched metal arbor form a romantic entry to a lawn enclosure at this Gainesville Florida yard. Light-colored fabrics catch the eye and keep loungers cool in the heat while a background of mature cedars helps make the blooming roses stand out.
Scot Ragsdale Landscape Design
8. Make chairs a focal point. This pair of white sling-back canvas chairs pops out of the dappled shade in this Gainesville, Florida lawn, where chic meets hip amid the green foliage of hostas, azaleas and white variegated brunnera (Brunnera 'Jack Frost', zones 3 to 8).
Aiken House & Gardens
9. String a white hammock. Got a lot of color in your flower borders? White goes with everything, and a traditional rope hammock is a practical way to enjoy the Gainesville scenery. It's also easy to take down and store at the end of the season.
Austin Ganim Landscape Design, LLC
10. Mix white with water. Classical urns with white chaise longues balance nicely with the creamy blooms of smooth hydrangeas (Hydrangea arborescens 'Annabelle', zones 3 to 9) in this Gainesville landscape.
Paintbox Garden
11. Install a white bench. I love the simplicity and elegance of this beautiful bench placed with care beneath mature trees. It's a work of art, with ornamental appeal, but offers comfort and relaxation.
Barbara Cannizzaro
12. Make a small space feel bigger. Short on space? Make it feel a little less cramped by using white, as shown in this Gainesville garden. The crisp fabric of the seat cushion allows for a constant scene change with bold colored pillows, cut flowers and decorative accents.
Margie Grace - Grace Design Associates
13. Go for classic style. White roses are a girl's best friend (or is that diamonds?). Whatever your taste, a lush urn overflowing with blooms can make the heart swell. And did I mention the scent?
Westover Landscape Design, Inc.
14. Grace a door with climbers. White clematis shows off with style. Give it support and shade its roots with smaller plants around the base of the container, like variegated sedge (Carex morrowii'Ice Dance') or cool chartreuse coleus.
Paintbox Garden
15. Mount a white birdhouse in a flower border. A whimsical birdhouse makes a good companion to white lilies, garden phlox (Phlox paniculata 'David') and smooth hydrangeas in this coastal Maine garden.
Verdance Landscape Design
16. Anchor tall plantings. In this San Francisco garden, white tulips lend a pristine formality to a brick-edged, curved stone walkway. Punctuated with columnar evergreens, the look is understated and timeless, and can be easily switched once the flowers fade.
Westover Landscape Design, Inc.
17. Fill a space with shrubs. Use panicle hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata 'Limelight', zones 3 to 8) with frothy Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macro 'Aureola') to screen a fence and create a full border with lots of visual interest.
Genus Loci Ecological Landscapes Inc.
18. Build a border with trees. When designing with white, remember that trees provide big impact, as shown in this Toronto garden, which has a line of white birch set against a building as a naturalistic screen with harmonious repetition and care.
19. Design for seasonal impact. In Vancouver, Washington, a stately grid of white flowering trees lends timeless appeal to a formal garden parterre centered around a single blue focal point. The look is pure and fresh, crisp and deliberately restrained — elegance redefined.
Paintbox Garden
20. Use plants with variegated foliage. White variegated brunnera (Brunnera macrophylla'Jack Frost') is one of the very best perennials for brightening shade, and its tiny blue flowers are a joy.