Country Living (UK)

IN FULL BLOOM

During this season of abundance, take inspiratio­n from nature’s berries, flowers and foliage to create a colourful display

- words and styling by bea andrews photograph­s by eva nemeth

Expert advice on creating your own seasonal floral arrangemen­t

as the growing season comes to its fruition, our thoughts turn to picking, gathering and making the most of nature’s bounty, while also reflecting on our hard work throughout the year. With the temperatur­e dropping and daylight hours shortening, plant growth slows down. It is time to pause and admire the full-blown glory of late summer, and celebrate the turning of the seasons with an autumn project, capturing the feeling of abundance now surroundin­g us.

While the hedgerows are laden with bright, ripe berries and plenty of richly coloured foliage, it’s possible to echo the varied shapes, colours and textures of the landscape in a floral display. Hawthorn and sloe berries, rosehips, sorbus, cotoneaste­r, viburnum, ilex and photinia, with their variation of vibrant leaves and fruit, all suit this kind of treatment.

Unexpected seasonal ingredient­s from the garden or vegetable plot, such as bolting brassica plants, kale leaves, herbs, fruit and flowers, look great in autumn arrangemen­ts. Many edibles are also very decorative, making them excellent multipurpo­se plants. One of my favourites in the vegetable garden is red orach (Atriplex hortensis rubra). Its young leaves can be added to salads and, when mature, it makes a tall architectu­ral foliage plant with racemes of tiny flowers, often used in floristry. Later in the year, its dry seedpods also make an attractive feature. Ferns, tawny grasses, dried flowers and seed heads will create a muted background and wonderfull­y offset the rich reds and purples of dahlias. See overleaf for instructio­ns on how to create an autumn wreath for your home.

Create a natural wreath base by twisting long bendy, leafless stems of wisteria, willow, dogwood or similar into a circle. For foraged ingredient­s, check what is available to collect on walks around your local area. I used a selection of branches, including wild red crab apple (similar to Malus robusta ‘Red Sentinel’), ornamental grape vine (Parthenoci­ssus quinquefol­ia), native hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) and blackthorn (Prunus spinosa), with its dark sloe berries. Arrange three to four stems of each together with a few dried fern leaves in a semi-circle on the wreath base and secure with wire or twine. Add home-grown produce from your garden or allotment: I picked hops, purple perilla, dill flowers, flowering stems of chard and seed pods of red orach and rocket. These will create another layer of interest and texture.

For that bountiful autumn feel, add brightly coloured dahlias, artichoke heads, mini pumpkins or other small yet ornamental vegetables and fresh or dried hydrangea flowers. The stems of these can be inserted through the wreath. Use wire or twine to fix them into place. To prolong the life of your fresh blooms, insert their stems into small plastic tubes filled with water when attaching them to the wreath.

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 ??  ?? The rich tones of flowers and foliage at this time of year lend themselves well to a seasonal display. Hung up indoors or out, the wreath highlights autumn’s beauty
The rich tones of flowers and foliage at this time of year lend themselves well to a seasonal display. Hung up indoors or out, the wreath highlights autumn’s beauty
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