10 Dazzling Winter Container Designs
Get inspired by these ideas for festive arrangements in outdoor pots and planters
With your summer container gardens no doubt long past their prime and the winter holidays fast approaching, it’s the perfect time to spruce up your containers with some holiday cheer. From simple to ornate, here are 10 dazzling ways to add a touch of color and sparkle to your home’s exterior this winter.
2. Festive vessels. Containers in a bright shade can also add color to winter arrangements. Here, the sprigs of winterberry and red butcher’s broom (Ruscus sp.) echo the glossy red pots. White twigs accent the foliage of glaucous eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), while the leaves of bold southern magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora) and the Fraser fir (Abies fraseri) add texture and movement.
3. Oversized ornaments. If you’re low on branches, or they’re not your style, you can add ornaments to containers. Here, spheres in three different materials create a lively container vignette. If you’re not into the red theme for the holidays, waterproof ornaments like these are a great way to use a different color scheme.
4. Architectural accessories. A metal trellis is a great way to give your container design more structure and prominence. Here, a metal sphere acts as the frame for a design that includes spruce and juniper boughs, a spray of redtwig dogwood and ornaments tucked around the base.
5. Tasty window boxes. You can also celebrate the bounty of the season by tucking in edible fruits. Apples (the ones here are artificial) give this window box a cornucopia feel, and natural lotus pods, pine cones and eucalyptus add interest in the center. Sprigs of eucalyptus add height. Noble fir (Abies procera), Port Orford cedar (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana), incense cedar (Calocedrus decurrens) and eastern white pine fill out the box.
6. Winter-blooming flowers. You don’t have to start from scratch to create a gorgeous winter design. Here, a single juniper that can live in this container year-round is spruced up with bright red cyclamens and boughs of cedar garland, secured with irrigation spikes draped from the lip of the pot. Euphorbia ‘Helena’s Blush’ fills out the container.
Tip: Cyclamen persicum is only winter-hardy to USDA zones 9 to 11 (find your zone). If your area teeters on the hardiness edge, keep the arrangement close to the house so it can benefit from the extra warmth emitted.
Tip: Cyclamen persicum is only winter-hardy to USDA zones 9 to 11 (find your zone). If your area teeters on the hardiness edge, keep the arrangement close to the house so it can benefit from the extra warmth emitted.
7. Trailing vines. Ivy is another great choice if you prefer your designs to have something living. The white birch branches bursting from the top here pick up on the variegation in this ivy variety. Pine boughs, false cypress greens, southern magnolia leaves and winterberry holly round out the arrangement.
8. Massed leaves and branches. If simple is more your style but you still want to enjoy your containers through winter, try tucking a group of magnolia boughs around three to five branches of Himalayan birch (Betula utilis var. jacquemontii). The effect is contemporary and festive, and the arrangement can last well into the new year.
9. Dramatic bare branches. This grouping of curly willow (Salix matsudana) branches creates quite a modern, festive and long-lasting entry vignette. Branches at least 4 feet tall emerge from a bed of pine cones. For extra pizazz, wind a string of twinkle lights through the pine cones. At night, the curly twigs will glow from the base.
Branches Bring the Winter Spirit to Container Gardens
Branches Bring the Winter Spirit to Container Gardens
10. Illuminating glass art. Glass art, like this piece by Seattle artist Jesse Kelly, is a stunning way to take your containers clear through the winter season. In the darkest months, when you’re desperate for color and light, glass ornaments will shimmer and sparkle.
This piece can stay outside all winter long in its Seattle-area garden (zones 6 to 8). Check with local vendors or artists for regional recommendations.
Your turn: We’d love to see how you carry your containers through winter. Do you add conifer boughs, ornaments or twinkle lights? Please share in the Comments below.
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This piece can stay outside all winter long in its Seattle-area garden (zones 6 to 8). Check with local vendors or artists for regional recommendations.
Your turn: We’d love to see how you carry your containers through winter. Do you add conifer boughs, ornaments or twinkle lights? Please share in the Comments below.
More
A Contractor’s Secrets to Hanging Holiday Decor
5 Important Winter Tasks to Keep Container Gardens in Shape
Here, we see a combination of eucalyptus, magnolia, white pine and incense cedar. The red stems of redtwig dogwood (Cornus sericea) and red winterberry (Ilex verticillata) pick up on the red door to complete a festive scene.
Tip: Tuck the twigs into the center of the design for added height and drama.
See how to put a festive container together in 30 minutes