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Liquidscapes
  6 reviews
Added to 990 ideabooks
Last comment "Hedge"
This photo has 1 question
This boxwood hedge serves two purposes, one to act as a "Green" guardrail to comply with zoning and also a an architecture form of the space.
species of boxwood is this? Also what is the name of the grass in front of it? Thanks..
orean boxwood and it is not a grass, but Liriope, which has a small blue/purples flower in summer.
boxwood, mondo grass, rhody and slate
Contrast of boxwood with mondo grass.
Grasses layered in front of Boxwoods
boxwood hedge, bordered with dwarf liriope makes a nice ransition to lawn or patio stone - background plantings of r
Boxwood with long grass at base... Hummm
Ideas of what to plant with the boxwood.
Boxwood w/ contrasting unruly soft plants
What to plant with it. If you've shaped your boxwood hedge to have a crisp, manicured edge, you may want to have some softer forms adjacent to it for
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Great Design Plant: Boxwood This elegant evergreen can shape shift into forms limited only by a gardener's imagination and a cli... Full Story »
9 Low-Growing Hedges That Make Good Neighbors Define garden areas or borders without blocking the view, with these evergreen shrubs that take kind... Full Story »
Kim Gamel
  3 reviews
Added to 432 ideabooks
Last comment "shrub"
This photo has 1 question
Green shrubs all winter. Good for smaller evergreen for container gardens or as a hedge, boxwood 'Green Gem' makes a good choice.
Boxwood (Buxus 'Green Gem') USDA zones: 4 to 9 Mature size:
Boxwood (Buxus 'Green Gem') - Year Round Green
Boxwood - full sun to partial sun
Boxwood for a great hedge for pretty privacy!
hedge, boxwood 'Green Gem' makes a good choice. It's a broadleaf evergreen shrub that forms a dense 2-foot sphere at maturity.Boxwood(Buxus 'Green Gem')USDA zones: 4 to 9Mature size: 1 1/2 to 2 feet tall and wideLight requirement: Full sun to partial sun Water requirement: Medium moisture; well-drained
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Land Architects, Inc.
Added to 713 ideabooks
Last comment "Yard"
This photo has 1 question
like the boxwood and the European hornbeams
boxwood hedge - drought tolerant needs full sun in northern zone
front w boxwood and hornbeam smitty
Line the driveway with boxwood shrubbery.
Common name: Boxwood USDA zones: 5 to 9 (find your zone) Water requirement:
name: BoxwoodUSDA zones: 5 to 9 (find your zone)Water requirement: This plant is quite drought tolerant.Light requirement: Partial shade to full sunMature size: Technically, boxwood can get to about 10 feet high and 10 feet wide, but it is a very slow-growing plant.Benefits and tolerances: Boxwood is
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Loudon's Design Build experts
Jakobsen & Bowe is a design build firm serving Northern Virginia. We are active in new home construction, home remodeling and home additions.
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Blasen Landscape Architecture
Added to 2,616 ideabooks
Last comment "przycięte boxtrees"
This photo has 2 questions
e are boxwoods, not arborvitae. I like boxwoods because the deer do not ever eat them! English boxwoods keep their shapes without trimming. However, you can trim them to keep them a certain size. I clip branches out of the bush so the light gets to the middle of the bush. Sheared boxwoods sometimes
not a Boxwood (Buxus) it's in the Arborvitae family. The latin name is Thuja occidentalis 'Bobazam' (Common name : Mr. Bowling Ball). Here's a link http://www.soonerplantfarm.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/plants.plantDetail/plant_id/1093/index.htm. I really do think that in the photo the leaves look more
more boxwood to me. "Mr. Bowling Ball" has a different texture to it that what I see in the photo but that would be a similar globe shaped shrub.
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Alan Mascord Design Associates Inc
  3 reviews
Added to 1,481 ideabooks
Last comment "initial boxwood"
This photo has 1 question
Boxwood grows slowly, which means you'll need to be patient; it won't shoot up to its potential 10 to 12 feet for decades and decades. This is what young boxwood plants look like at first. While boxwood is worth the wait, if you are impatient, Japanese Holly (Ilex crenata), which
Boxwood grows slowly, which means you'll need to be patient; it won't shoot up to its potential 10 to 12 feet for decades and decades. This is what young boxwood plants look like at first. While boxwood is worth the wait, if you are impatient
look to boxwood but is much faster growing, might be for you. It will need more pruning than boxwood as it matures, and while it's a lovely plant, it's not quite as elegant as boxwood.
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Felhandler/ Steeneken Architects
Added to 4,330 ideabooks
Last comment "bay and colonial"
This photo has 2 questions
like the boxwood and the large flowering tree behind them
boxwood walkway and height in back
boxwood up front, roses in back
these might be boxwoods - they are ok with something
boxwoods in front, roses in back drainspouts dark color
row of boxwoods adds a bit of formality to this shingled home. Easy and affordable pink flamingos show off the homeowner's whimsical personality.
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Leslie Rohrer
Added to 1,857 ideabooks
Last comment "Front yard"
This photo has 2 questions
walk, boxwood, and layers of plantings.
classic. Boxwoods are a great choice for imitating the look of one cohesive hedge.
Replace boxwood with holly bushes and this is what I want to do!
classic. Boxwoods are a great choice for imitating the look of one cohesive hedge
love the house love the walk way...boxwoods are so nice
Front yard landscape with boxwood and flowers
classic. Boxwoods are a great choice for imitating the look of one cohesive hedge.
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Secret Gardens
Added to 3,072 ideabooks
Last comment "hedges and walls"
clipping: boxwood (Buxus sempervirens), English yew (Taxus baccata), Japanese holly (Ilex crenata) and Osmanthus varieties.
Boxwood or English Yew or Japanese Holly
such as: Boxwood, English Yew, Japanese Holly, and Osmanthus.
What to do with little boxwoods
Cloud hedges made from boxwood,English yew,Japanese holly and osmanthus . The clipped hedges have a nice contrast
Sculptured boxwood hedging interacting with stacked stone walls.
Bubbles! The best plants to use in any form of cloud hedging are those with small foliage that will take close clipping: boxwood (Buxus sempervirens), English yew (Taxus baccata), Japanese holly (Ilex crenata) and Osmanthus varieties.
clipped boxwood — and the void of the lawn.To know whether spaces in your garden design work you can look at the ratio between the amount of mass and void. Generally a design requires 20 to 40 percent mass for an interesting and workable space.
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