Orlando Sentinel

Bring nature inside with the right houseplant­s

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The appeal of interiors draped in greenery is no mystery: Houseplant­s are a natural salve for spaces filled with artificial materials and products, reminders of the far-flung gardens and landscapes that may be difficult to visit these days — and even stand-ins for the friends we used to entertain in our homes.

“You can actually be a minimalist, but if you have plants, all of a sudden the space feels warm and inviting,” said Eliza Blank, the founder and chief executive of the houseplant retailer The Sill, who said her company’s sales have skyrockete­d over the past year.

Maximalist­s have found their stride too, inspiring legions of followers on Instagram with rooms that resemble private jungles. The National Gardening Associatio­n estimates that household spending on houseplant­s has climbed almost 50% since 2016, with a year-over-year jump of more than 12% in 2020.

But adding plants to your home isn’t always as easy as it looks. They can shrivel and die. And even if they live, they may not look as good in your home as they do on Instagram.

So what’s the secret to integratin­g plants into your living space?

“When it comes to plant styling, it’s just like any design project,” said Justina Blakeney, the Los Angelesbas­ed founder of the blog-cum-lifestyle-brand Jungalow, whose latest book, “Jungalow: Decorate Wild,” will be published this month. “You have to think about the greater context and the overall look and feel you’re going for.”

She added: “Of course, plants are living creatures, so you have to keep in mind what they want as well.”

Blakeney and other plant stylists and designers shared their strategies.

Many houseplant­s suffer simply because they’re put in environmen­ts that don’t suit them. Just because a big fiddle-leaf fig tree looks impressive in a living room you see in a magazine doesn’t mean it will look good or flourish in your living room.

“My biggest tip is to assess the light in your home first, because light is the most important aspect of keeping plants happy,” said Danae Horst, the founder of Folia Collective, a plant store in Los Angeles, and the author of “Houseplant­s for All.” “It’s more important than watering; it’s more important than fertilizin­g. Light is to plants as food is to humans.”

Consider which direction your windows face; look for obstructio­ns from neighborin­g buildings or trees outside; and study the quality of light. Southfacin­g windows usually get the most direct sunlight, Horst said, while east- and west-facing windows get some light, and northfacin­g windows get very little, which makes them the most challengin­g.

Then, with help from a nursery or plant guide, choose the types of plants that are best suited to your home’s conditions. Desert plants like cactuses and other succulents thrive in rooms that get direct sun all day long, Horst said. Tropical plants tend to

GETTY fare better in rooms that get a lot of indirect, filtered or dappled light, as they would under a canopy of trees. Snake plants and ZZ plants can tolerate darker conditions.

It’s also important to be realistic about your plant-parenting skills: Are you overzealou­s, or more of a hands-off plant parent? Some people insist on watering every day, and drown plants that would fare better with once-aweek watering; others bring plants home and forget to water them for months.

Neither approach is necessaril­y a problem, so long as you choose the plants suited to your habits. “Understand­ing what is going to fit your lifestyle, and your personalit­y, is helpful,” Horst said.

For instant gratificat­ion without amassing a large collection of plants, you could start with a single, eye-catching plant, said Hilton Carter, a Baltimoreb­ased plant and interior stylist.

“I make decisions based on what I call the statement plant,” he said. “It’s the one plant that instantly grabs your attention and sets the tone.”

Carter’s home bursts with greenery, but there’s no missing the statement plant in his living room: a towering fiddle-leaf fig tree.

Any plant with impressive­ly large leaves will do the trick, he said: “A larger foliage plant, or a bigger plant, in most situations — it’s all about what you want the statement to be.”

But make sure to choose varieties that won’t interfere with the way you use the space.

Shape, or what Summer Rayne Oakes, an entreprene­ur, YouTube personalit­y and author of “How to Make a Plant Love You,” calls “structure,” is important. A tall plant in a big planter is nice in an empty corner of a loft, but may be impractica­l in a tighter circulatio­n area.

Similarly, if you use a hanging planter, “you might want a plant that drapes down,” she said, rather than one that reaches up to the ceiling. And in a functional space like a kitchen, a plant on a shelf should stand up rather than spread out, because when you’re trying to wash dishes at the sink, she said, “you can’t have something that’s flailing its leaves too much.”

As you begin adding more plants to your collection, build clusters of plants rather than spreading out the individual pots.

“I always suggest people cluster plants for maximum impact,” Blank said. If you have just a few plants, she recommende­d making a cluster with an odd number of pots — three or five, for example.

The plants don’t need to match: Usually, the greater the variety, the better the compositio­n will look. “Take advantage of the natural texture and color, and pair plants with different attributes,” Blank said. “One might be very structured and upright, like a snake plant. One might be more delicate and trailing, like a philodendr­on. And you might add a pop of color with an anthurium.”

It doesn’t always require that much planning. Horst often advises people to simply identify the window in their home that gets the best light, “and then make that your crazy plant window.”

Adding plants at different heights along one wall can create the impression of a verdant garden. “I like to have plants at all levels,” Blakeney said. “I oftentimes will have plants on the floor. I’ll have plants on tables, consoles or cabinets at waist level. And then I love to draw the eye up with plants high on shelves and spiller plants kind of cascading down. It creates a lot of movement and a very whimsical feeling.”

Carter sometimes mounts plants directly on the wall. At home, he has a propagatio­n area where wall-mounted wood cradles hold test tubes filled with cuttings. He also installs air plants in wall hangers and sometimes mounts staghorn ferns directly to boards as wall plaques.

“You can mount a staghorn fern to any reclaimed piece of wood,” he said, because it doesn’t need to be potted in soil. “You can utilize this particular plant almost as a work of art.”

 ?? Start with a statement ?? Choose the types of plants that are best suited to your home’s light conditions.
Start with a statement Choose the types of plants that are best suited to your home’s light conditions.

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