Leek Post & Times

Backdrops of brilliance

By painting walls and fences you can set the scene for your plants

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THE plants are the stars in the theatre of gardening, holding our gaze throughout the seasons. To see them at their best, a good backdrop is essential.

For most gardens, the background or stage set will be our fences and walls, and often these can be what the builder left behind – unpainted wooden fence panels or bare concrete.

While foliage and flowers provide a changing kaleidosco­pe of colour, your background walls and fences are part of the picture too and there’s absolutely no reason why they can’t be painted to give them a lift.

The received wisdom in garden design is to reserve bright hues for hot countries that are bathed in strong light, such as those in the Mediterran­ean and Africa.

One of the best examples of this is La Majorelle in Marrakesh, Morocco. This remarkable garden was created by a French painter just outside the Medina in Marrakesh and is famous for its distinctiv­e use of colour.

The main building, all the walls and tanks of water are painted in a cobalt blue which dances in the blazing Moroccan sunshine. Terracotta pots and urns are painted other shades of blue and yellow.

The overall effect is a blue paradise and I always leave this garden with a strong sense of wonder.

But would this work under our cloudy skies? I love using deep colours such as deep navy or dark aubergine which can make a wonderful backdrop to dramatic foliage such as bamboos and tree ferns, and I generally steer away from insipid shades that can look a bit washed out.

My main principle with using colour is do what you want, break the rules or make your own. For instance, who would have thought about black as a backdrop to plants? In the US, landscape designer Nick Mccullough uses the deepest black to elegant effect on his home. It’s a definite statement and his palette of plants

Bold plants bring colour too

Diarmuid’s hot pink

Blue sweeping staircase makes a dramatic feature

The garden was created by a French painter

sitting against it are planned to contrast with the dark side. His silver border contains astelias, agaves, lavender and santolina and makes a wonderful statement.

Manoj Malde used bright colours in his 2017 Chelsea Flower Show garden called ‘Beneath a Mexican Sky.’ Inspired by the work of Mexican Modernist architect Luis Barragan, his colour-washed walls in tints of clementine, cappuccino and coral were uplifting.

So, this summer I decided to tear up the rule book and give it a go. An area under my veranda had recently been clad in clapboard wood and needed painting. Instead of something ‘tasteful,’ I plumped for pink… hot pink! I’m delighted with the result – it sizzles on a hot day and warms the area on duller days. It’s providing a superb backdrop for big terracotta

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