Silver-Leaved Plants In Garden Design – Plants that have colorful foliage are commonly found in ornamental gardens. Often or not, they are just thrown in without sufficient thought or consideration. They are most effective however, when their specific design potential is understood. This is true for a large number of garden plants whose foliage color is some variant of silver, grey or bluish-green.
Silver grey foliage is both typical and indicative of dry climates and arid conditions. Sage, lavender, santolina, Lamb’s Ears and herbs or aromatic plants like Artemisia originate from the Mediterranean, while the silver-leaved bush Leucophyllum frutescens grows wild in Texas. The leaf size of such plants is characteristically small, narrow and delicate in texture.
Lamb’s ears
Therefore, in stylistic terms, grey-leaved plants are most suited to Mediterranean-type gardens, associating well with olive and Cypress trees, junipers, small-leaved shrubs like pistachio and sumac, herbs and cushion plants. Small, grey-leaved grasses like Festuca glauca can serve as a subtle transition between silvery-grey plants and a group of larger ornamental grasses such as Pennisetum and Miscanthus. They blend beautifully with blues, lilacs and pinks and enhance the effect created by ornamental pebbles.
Cypress trees in Mediterranean garden
Another role for silver plants is as a sharp contrast with plants that have deep purple foliage. The Dusty Miller plants, Centaurea cineraria, or Senecio cineraria, can be quite dramatic against a background of Prunus pisardii, or Euphorbia cotinifolia. Similar effects can be created when they are combined with reds and oranges. It is here though that the inexperienced tend to get carried away. Contrast plants should be used sparingly and judiciously, with green being the dominant foliage color.
Grey plants do not combine well with obviously tropical plants. Typically, plants of tropical origin are deep green and possess large, sometimes massive leaves. Bird of Paradise and philodendron ‘Beefy’ are two examples, with which silver plants appear incongruously out of place.
Olive tree
Senecio cineraria combined with marigolds
Sumac
Santolina
Serbian yarrow
Leucophyllum frutescens