eclectic patio Second Story Deck on Lakeview Drive
Hydrangeas are perfect in formal gardens but work just as well in more informal settings. A path lined with these beauties is the perfect sidewalk guide for nighttime strolls.
traditional  by Amy Renea
Spiraea is a great choice for a white spring bloomer. It conveniently blooms at the same time as tall white iris and midsize white peonies. Combine these three plants for an easy-care, high-impact white garden.
contemporary landscape by Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design LLC
Working with a shady area? White astilbe is your solution. Brightening the darkest shade with waving plumes of white, astilbe is a classic, easy-to-grow shade perennial.
traditional landscape Traditional Landscape
Tips for a White-Blooming Border

Create a mix of heights that will bloom at the same time. This border does a fabulous job of spreading out the blooms to create a balanced look.
traditional landscape by Deborah Cerbone Associates, Inc.
Imagine what this walkway looks like at night — little dancing blooms all along the left side and a wave of shimmering white softening the fence to the right. Pure magic!
traditional  by Glenna Partridge Garden Design
Consider situating white plants around curves in the garden. When you're strolling through a garden at night, it is helpful to see the twists and turns ahead, so use white blooms as a natural sort of fluorescent arrow.
traditional landscape by Glenna Partridge Garden Design
Your white garden doesn't have to be expansive. Plant a few white blooming plants near the entrance of your home. When visitors approach the front door at dusk, they will be greeted by visible blooms.
traditional  The Mount (Edith Wharton's Lenox MA Estate)
Working White Blooms Into Every Garden Style

Traditional. White gardens can go ubertraditional with row after row of white blooms perfectly set in geometric arrangements.
traditional landscape by Lenkin Design Inc: Landscape and Garden Design
Another option is to encase a sea of white-blooming showstoppers in boxes of clipped hedges.
traditional landscape by AHBL
by AHBL »
Rustic. Go for a more natural, woodland look by incorporating minimally pruned trees and naturalistic plantings.
traditional patio by Aiken House & Gardens
Victorian. Charming in the daytime and magical at night, this white garden is full to bursting with blooms. Choose traditional white furnishings in iron, wood or wicker to add to the theme.

Whether you are gilding the lily of a classic trimmed estate or starting a country garden from scratch, consider the impact white blooms can have on your space. Create an all-white garden, add a few white bloomers around curves, or line paths that night travelers will be taking.

Tell us: Do you have white blooms in your garden now? Show them off below!


See more great design flowers and plants

More:
What to Do in Your Garden This Month

Comments

Erika Bierman Photography Beautiful!
11 months ago · ·
Nat We planted white gardenias in pots on the patio and have a huge 35 year old white frangipani tree out the front of the house - both look pretty in the moonlight with the added bonus of beautiful scents
11 months ago · ·
Mary My garden is based on white flowers.
I love the white flowers, really light up the night!
11 months ago · ·
Amy Renea Mary, your garden is stunning!! ...and Natasha your garden sounds wonderful as well! I've never smelled a frangipani...someday...
11 months ago ·
Mary Thank you so much for the compliments Amy.
My last purchase is a plant of "Ipomea Alba" but it's not flower,
because here is cold again.

I have visited "A nest for all season" , I find it a wonderful place for the mind, soul, heart and eyes.
Thank you for you competence, art and disponibility.


I'll follow you with pleasure.
11 months ago · ·
Your New Home LLC I visited a green and white garden once in which the designer only used plants with snow white blooms and deep green foliage. The variety of plants was surprising and the impact was remarkable. The house was white and a pair of planters on either side of the entry featured a bed of English roses with a single red bloomer on each side. Those red blooms were like lightning bolts against the otherwise white and green landscape. An effect I've not encountered since.
11 months ago · ·
jinglebelle I just wish that the flowers in the rest of the photos had been identified. Is there a guide somewhere as to blooming times, so that you can plan for having several different kinds in bloom at the same time in every season?
11 months ago · ·
Amy Renea Mary -- thank you!!

Your new home -- that simply sounds DIVINE...I imagine any color might work like that against a green/white background -- bright orange would be really pretty too, don't you think?

Jinglebelle - thanks for the input and I need to work on a bloom guide for the color gardens - great idea! The problem with pinpointing exact bloom times is that even considering zones, it is like nailing a fish to the wall. Even within the same garden, plants can have different bloom times based on their placement. For example, I recently split a Montauk daisy that blooms in September and placed several around my garden to bloom at once. One particular plant in a sunny spot is blooming now (early June!), so go figure! The best way to go about a white garden that is constantly in bloom is to buy spring blooming, summer blooming and fall blooming plants and buy a LOT of different varieties. A start could include spring tulips and iris, summer hydrangea, astilbe (shade), spirea and lilies and end the show with fall montauks and then you could add in various others as you stumble upon them! The plants I've listed can be seen above!
11 months ago ·
gschneider Living in humid & hot Cincinnati, Ohio, we switched a few years ago to white as our big summer bloomers because we found they have such a calming & cooling effect on us - especially at the end of a particularly hot day. We added some cooling greens & lavender through catmint & lavender - plus the catmint helps keep the deer away form the hydrangeas they love so much!
11 months ago · ·
candyw i have moved to a lake home and am starting from scratch to build a white garden. - white periwinkle, coconut surprise dianthus, white bleeding heartts, goats beard, henryi clematis, ferns, hostas, ferns, limelight hydrangea, white climbing hydrangea, and white wisteria.
11 months ago · ·
Amy Renea Can't wait to see photos candy!! gschneider, I'm a Cincy native -- glad to see the nati representing on Houzz ;) Your garden is beautiful!
11 months ago ·
breathlessone Our front yard is a white garden and passersby in the neighborhood love it.
11 months ago · ·
csdes Moonflowers are a vine. The huge, white, fragrant flowers open in the evening and smell like summer. Save the seeds each year to replant and share.
11 months ago · ·
susanb9 This article was a true inspiration for me! Everyone has such great ideas and Mary's garden is a dream. I have purchased a stone cottage and I think this concept of an all white garden would be perfect. These ideas will keep me dreaming all summer.
11 months ago · ·
Amy Renea Mary -- do you have a website or additional photos of your garden?
11 months ago · ·
Mary Thank you so much for the compliments.
Sorry for my bad English.
Your white gardens are all wonderful and very large.
Yes, I've others images of my garden, it's my life.
Every year it is different.

I have a web site but in relation of my job and one in relation of my hobby.
In this last one sometimes I tell of my garden.

I hope to make pleasure you with others images of white flowers in my garden
(My first intent, also if in this time I've added other colours of flowers).
The dates are different for every image.

Now I am to search the plant of "Astilbe" in white colour,
that I do not knew until now,
it is very elegance,
and in my garden there is very darkest shade.

Thank you for let me know this plant.
11 months ago · ·
The Outdoor Room, LLC White in the evening garden is the culmination of summer. Our designs include the attributes of silvers, fragrance and course foliages in addition to "The Fairy" Rose, Moon Vine and Casablance Asiatic Lilies to name a few.
10 months ago · ·
Benjamin Vogt Liatris scariosa 'alba' and mountain ate good natives to have.
9 months ago · ·
mbastone What part of the country will you have to live to have a garden like all of this? with white flowers?
9 months ago ·
Amy Renea nbastone -- some of the comments show homeowners throughout the midwest and I am on the eastern coast/ mid-atlantic region. There are definitely plants in all of the USA zones that would work for a white garden, though they would vary. (i.e. tropicals in Florida vs. hardy perennials farther north). I can't speak for Alaska - anyone???
9 months ago ·
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