Combinations from Dusk to Dawn at BBC Gardeners’ World Fair
As headline partner at the new BBC Gardeners’ World Spring Fair, held at Beaulieu in Hampshire between 28th to 30th May 2021, we created a stunning four-part garden display to inspire visitors in their own gardens.
The design for the Hillier Experience was based on the distinct moods and symbolic colour palettes experienced throughout a day in the garden, from the buzz of activity in the morning to the dark wild of night. Here, we take a detailed look at the thought behind the Colour Combinations from Dusk to Dawn design and offer advice on achieving any of the four areas in your own garden.
From Dusk to Dawn: Colour Creativity
As a brand-new show, and an entirely new outdoor area to design within, BBC Gardeners’ World Spring Fair offered a fantastic opportunity to showcase creative garden ideas with minimal limitations.
To turn the display space into an ‘experience’, we chose to create four distinct areas of planting. This gave greater opportunity to inspire visitors looking for ideas for their own gardens.
The concept of a ‘dusk to dawn’ garden developed organically in line with these four areas; planting displays to represent morning, afternoon, evening, and night-time. As we closely monitored the progress of the plants growing on our nurseries in Hampshire, each area evolved, the themes started to knit together and combinations developed which included not only plant selections, but additions of pots, aggregates, and accessories.
This dusk to dawn design is very much about taking the creative essence of each time of day. Practically, of course, you wouldn’t change your garden and plants as the day progressed. However, each area offered a colour palette and conjured up a particular mood associated with that time of day. This allowed visitors to instinctively feel which area most spoke to them.
While this approach left plenty of opportunity for practical discussion – still ensuring the right plant for the right place – it allowed the emotion of the garden to come to the fore.
From Dusk to Dawn: The Morning Garden
The morning garden was the ‘working’ area. It was charged with the energy of a new day – and a recently drunk cup of coffee – as the sun swept across the sky and the birds and plants sprang into life. This was the time of day when you might purposefully tour your garden before embarking on some vigorous gardening activities.
This space was filled with bright, clean colours – vivid greens, yellows, and whites to awaken the senses. Colour came equally from foliage as flower, like the bright green leaves of cornus, choisya, and acer. Whilst a productive area, it also contained the beautiful scent of herbs and vegetable plants including tomatoes, peppers, and beans. A gravel stone pathway led through the plot and helpful garden implements could be found, signifying an intention to work.
Key Plants
- Eryngium x zabelii ‘Blue Waves’
- Digitalis
- Viburnum
- Verbascum
Inspired Quotes
“My favourite time in the garden is early morning with a cuppa watching the sun come up. The waft of honeysuckle is behind me and my garden looking so fresh waiting for the day ahead” – customer comment, social media.
“My favourite time of day in the garden is first thing. Breakfast and a mug of tea in the sunny part of the garden while listening and watching the birds, watching the bee’s come and go, watching the squirrels and enjoying the colours in the garden. Then pottering in the garden and greenhouse, seeing what has changed from the previous day and what jobs need to be done.” – customer comment, social media.
From Dusk to Dawn: The Afternoon Garden
The mood changed completely as you walked to the next area, the afternoon garden.
Following a productive morning, this space was inspired by leisure, calm, and relaxation. It brought home memories of days whiled away in the sunshine.
The colour palette here was dominated by pastel tones – soft pinks, lavenders, purples, white, and silver. Cottage garden style plants rubbed shoulders with each other – aquilegia, lavender, lupins, and digitalis. Pretty pale coloured pots complemented the planting. Informal ground level seating – a rug, set with a pot of tea – signified an intention to stop, enjoy the garden, and listen to the sounds of the birds. A sunhat and a copy of BBC Gardeners’ World magazine completed the sense of putting your feet up.
Key Plants
- Cornus
- Viburnum
- Hydrangea
- Lavender
- Lupinus
Inspired Quotes
“My favourite time in the garden is the afternoon when I’ve got time to sit, relax and enjoy my surroundings.” – customer comment, social media.
From Dusk to Dawn: The Evening Garden
The inspiration for the evening garden was a more romantic mood. A place to celebrate the end of a good day, enjoying a glass of wine on a table for two with lit candles.
Planting was predominantly in shades of orange and deep red, from acers to our new plant introduction, Cercis x canadensis ‘Eternal Flame.’ These tones picked up the rich colours of sunset, with twinkling lights and the scents of the evening garden drifting across the display. Rusty, earthy pots complemented the colour palette of the plants.
Key Plants
- Acer Polemonium
- Geum
- Cercis x canadensis ‘Eternal Flame’
Inspired Quotes
“My favourite time of day in the garden is late evening, sunset, listening to the birds singing, and just admiring the plants…with a glass of wine!” – customer comment, social media.
“My favourite time of day in the garden is when the evening sun catches a part of the garden in summer. You can dine out and take in the scent of honeysuckle or jasmine.” – customer comment, social media.
The Night Garden
The night garden is one that more often belongs to our wildlife than to us. Hedgehogs, owls, and other creatures busy themselves by the moonlight.
When the heat of the day subsides, and all is peaceful, the tranquil atmosphere reveals itself, making use of rich, dark planting. Senecio ‘Angel Wings’ with its large, soft downy silver leaves grew next to the dark leaves of the heucheras and Anthriscus sylvestris ‘Ravenswing’ pushed through its cloudy white cow parsley flowers.
Night lights twinkled and highlighted the shadows made by the delicate leaves of acers. Striking dark pots and a wildlife path completed this final area of the garden. It was free-flowing and, like its occupants, a little wild.
Key Plants
- Anthriscus sylvestris ‘Ravenswing’
- Lysimachia
- Sambucus
- Cotinus
Inspired Quotes
“My favourite time in the garden is at dusk when everything is quiet and still. The beautiful flower scents are more noticeable. It’s so peaceful and calming!” – customer comment, social media.
Creating a Thread
The Hillier Experience had distinct planting areas, but the design was brought together in several ways.
At the centre sat a pergola, with shrubs softly undulating at its corners. Certain plants also made extremely valuable ‘mixers’, able to unite different areas of a garden. Blue plants were fantastically valuable for this, able to blend into almost any colour scheme. Blue plants were used as a common thread throughout each area of the garden. Some plants could also be found in every area, such as digitalis.
Tips for the Home Garden
Along with inspiration for colour palettes, there were plenty of additional tips for visitors to The Hillier Experience to take away for their own gardens:
- Remain conscious of the layout of your garden when positioning plants. If you are drawn to hostas (in the morning garden section), it is essential they are planted in a shady spot in your home garden to thrive. “Right plant, right place” remains one of the most important gardening mantras for success!
- A ‘random’ garden was one of the most frequently heard complaints people made about their own planting! While the reality is we all tended to buy things we like, (which can create a bit of randomness), putting in place a colour theme and sticking to it as much as possible could alleviate some of that sense of random planting.
- One of the first elements when starting a colour scheme is the coloured foliage plants. If you want to recreate the brightness of the ‘morning’ theme, first position your bright foliage plants – choisya, acer, cotinus – then after those are in place, introduce the rest.
- A tightly packed planting style, as used for The Hillier Experience, really creates a sense that the garden is overflowing.
With Thanks to Supporters of the Hillier Experience