Orlando Sentinel

Creating a warm welcome

- By Connie Nelson

MINNEAPOLI­S — Winter hasn’t arrived — well, not technicall­y, anyway — but it’s time to give it a warm welcome. Since the chrysanthe­mums have been leveled by killing frost, we’re getting an early start to winter-pot season.

“I can’t be without them,” said Beth Rau of Pahl’s Market in Apple Valley, Minnesota, about winter containers. “They’re welcoming, a pop of color, and they add so much to a front door or a porch.”

Whether you build your own planter or buy one ready-made, whether you stick with traditiona­l spruce tips or go wild with cuttings from your garden, wintertime containers are “little pieces of art that make a house a home,” said Madeline Parks, assistant manager at Leitner’s Garden Center in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Potting up fresh evergreens, birch branches and colorful berries is “our way of beating the winter weather,” Rau said. bit of longevity.”

She started with sturdy birch poles, chosen because they’re easy to work with and provide a stunning contrast to evergreens. She also used curly willow branches for height, and “one beefy” spruce top. While they are sometimes overused, Parks relies on these hardworkin­g, conical branches to give shape to a design.

“They’re good as a base, but there are so many other types of greens to use,” including “flowy” Norway pine and “drapey” cedar, which she tucked in around the base of the pot to give it a soft, finished look. For color, she added fresh toyanberry, bluebell eucalyptus and magnolia leaves.

Happy holidays: Parks went full-tilt traditiona­l for her holiday-themed design. She relied heavily on easily accessible materials — spruce tips, wispy white pine, cedar. But she based her design around one standout element: a manzanita branch, tall, showy and strong.

Because she wanted to showcase the decorative branch, not have it “hidden behind greens,” she decided to “play with the shape” of her design. Instead of a more convention­al conical shape, she created a lower, rounder design with the evergreens. For added texture, she tucked in some Carolina sapphire. For color, she used bright red winterberr­y and a few wellplaced pine cones.

Welcome winter: To get a look to last all season long, Rau went for texture, selecting a mix of greens — including spruce tips, pines, cedar and juniper. She also added some variegated boxwood. Its white-tipped green leaves create a focal point and add a contrastin­g color. Even better, they keep their fresh look until spring. To add height, solidity and structure, Rau nestled in three fairly thick birch branches.

“There’s nothing like beautiful birches in winter,” she said.

The finishing touches include a neutralcol­ored bow and a couple of fire-red cardinals, which she perched on the birch poles.

Happy holidays: Rau’s love of red, which she calls “the most traditiona­l Christmas color,” led her to augment her Christmast­hemed design with a handmade glittery red ribbon, red twig dogwood branches and red huckleberr­y leaves.

She started her design with a hefty number of spruce tips, then supplement­ed them with sturdy branches of blueberry juniper, which she uses to fill holes and add a bluish contrast to the other greens, including wispy white pine and cone cedar, which drapes over the front of the pot.

Red twig dogwood branches add height and continue the red theme. Then she added a few pine cones as finishing touches.

 ?? LEILA NAVIDI/STAR TRIBUNE ?? Madeline Parks tucked Norway pine and “drapey” cedar around the base of this winter pot to give it a soft, finished look.
LEILA NAVIDI/STAR TRIBUNE Madeline Parks tucked Norway pine and “drapey” cedar around the base of this winter pot to give it a soft, finished look.
 ?? LEILA NAVIDI/STAR TRIBUNE ?? Parks based her holiday design around one standout element: a tall, showy and strong manzanita branch.
LEILA NAVIDI/STAR TRIBUNE Parks based her holiday design around one standout element: a tall, showy and strong manzanita branch.
 ?? BRIAN PETERSON/STAR TRIBUNE ?? The white-tipped green leaves of the variegated boxwood create a focal point and add contrast to Beth Rau’s winter pot.
BRIAN PETERSON/STAR TRIBUNE The white-tipped green leaves of the variegated boxwood create a focal point and add contrast to Beth Rau’s winter pot.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States