Added to 881 ideabooks Last comment "Love these decorative "plant walls". Not sure the AZ climate is conducive to one of these though. :-" This photo has 2 questions
create this vertical garden?
I am a designer in AUS and would like to know more about this system.
Thanks
James
do this indoors where most edibles don't thrive. So, depending on your climate and if you can do this outdoors, stick with hardy everygreens- mint, parsley,rosemary, thymes even strawberries could work and look full enough for a cohesive design. Good luck!
a close up of the vertical garden. Mine's gonna have herbs, too
Living wall.....decorative for fence....possibly for vertical herb garden?
Using succulents and ferns in a vertical wall garden - rodent issues limited?
Where can I purchase the containers for this vertical garden?
How about an indoor living wall? The lush, living texture is also an
can work indoors or out to give a home a jaw-dropping vertical garden. This one is filled with a variety of verdant houseplants, but you could just as easily use a garden-full of herbs in their place.
This installation is similar to the previous one, but is indoors and further along, showing the coverage
about an indoor living wall? The lush, living texture is also an oxygen producer!
For a twist on traditional garden design, go vertical. A green wall created with Woolly Pockets adds unexpected texture and life to a wall.
Love this garden!! I am working on a "green" bathroom and had an idea of a vertical garden then came across this picture. Perhaps I could create something
smaller in scale and use some air plants. This is beautiful living art!!
entire vertical garden. Go to their listing/webpage and you'll get lots of info about it. Succulents and hen's and chicks work really well but I've also grown ornamental grasses (Carex comans 'Bronze') that cascade down like little waterfalls...similar to what Debora Carl has done on her beautiful "living
"living garden" in one of their scenes. For those who are unfamiliar with the show, it shoots New York.
The succulents are planted in modular vertical wall planters, and installed in a wall
Wall garden and the red wall behind, the selection
2. Use vertical space. Low-growing chartreuse plants enliven a living wall, complementing the greenish blues of the glazed pottery in this patio at Flora Grubb Gardens in San Francisco. I love how the cool greens pop against the red corrugated siding.
succulents vertically is using a Living Wall Planter from Bright Green. Bright Green sells planters with a moisture mat that keeps watering simple and doesn't require removing the frame from the wall.
A planted canvas of succulents, designed by Flora Grubb Gardens in San Francisco, is framed as fine art
wall garden. As intricate and beautiful as a work of art, a wall-mounted garden can be the focal point of a patio. Try your hand at a smaller-scale version or hire a pro to design something similar to what is shown here.