BBC Home


23 November 2009
Accessibility help
Text only

how to be a gardener - The complete online guide

BBC Homepage
Lifestyle
Gardening
Part One
Part Two


Are you signed in?
Go here for more information

Planting schemes and themes

Planting styles

Combining plants

Do your research

Test your knowledge

Go further

Plant lists

Interactives

Glossary

Credits

Programme information

Help with plugins

Gardening newsletter

Site map


Contact Us

Like this page?
Send it to a friend!
 



home

Module 1

Module 2

Module 3

Module 4

Module 5

Module 6

Module 7

Module 8

3 - Planting styles

Print page

Formal vs informal
Formal gardens are full of straight lines and informal ones are full of curves.

Formal border
©   Formal planting
Formal planting is a bit like a military parade - there is a definite structure to it. Think of a vegetable plot - it's all serried ranks; or bedding schemes where each plant covers a specific area and is part of a large plan, or large geometrically shaped blocks of ground cover.

Informal planting Informal planting
Informal planting is softer and more relaxed. The planting is organised and co-ordinated, but the effect is more an attempt to imitate how it's done in nature, perhaps using flowing drifts of plants, bulbs poking up through the lawns, wildflower meadows and bog gardens.

Traditional herbaceous
©

Traditional herbaceous border
The large and spectacular type of thing you see in large country house gardens. Often backed by a yew hedge or high stone wall and packed with summer-flowering perennials.
To make an impact, herbaceous borders must be at least 1.2m (3.9ft) wide. They are high maintenance - weeding, staking, deadheading , dividing, and so on - and, come winter, all that’s left is bare soil.
A more modern approach is to use herbaceous plants in an island bed so that you can view them from all sides. Tallest plants are in the middle and island shapes are normally informal to suit the informal drifts of the plants. Beds should be wide enough apart to allow the grass to act as a backdrop.

Previous

page

1

of

2

next

3. Planting schemes and themes

Introduction
Planting styles
Combining plants
Do your research
Test your knowledge
Go further


Highlights

Plant lists

Plant lists

View plant lists on:




Find thousands more plants in the BBC Gardening database .


Video

Video

The supreme challenge of planting is getting the right style. Find out more here.




Interactive

Interactive
Experiment with the colour wheel feature , or take a fun attribute quiz to see what style of garden may suit you.
(External) Requires Flash 5


Useful links



About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy
 

Explore the BBC

Change Text Only Settings

Graphic version of this page