THE MODERN MINT BLOG

Jan08

Garden Design Trends 2015

Last year we posted a blog on Garden Design Trends for 2014. It was based on a piece in Gardens Illustrated detailing what a number of designers thought would be in vogue during the year.

It is such an interesting idea we are giving it a go again this year – with the caveat that any trend in the garden is more likely to take about 15 years before it becomes popular, rather than 12 months – so you have plenty of time to learn more about the idea before trying it out.

Here is a brief rundown of what they said last years trends might have been…

1) Good soil, water and food will become treasured.

2) Use meadow mixes at the edge of things.

3) More focus on plants.

4) Don’t landfill.

5) Use large planters.

We have been naughty when choosing the trends for a brief rundown – we chose the ones we like the most, the plant centred ones, the ones that ask to reduce waste. We feel these are important ideas, and wonder how big an affect they will have on the garden industry – there has been such a strong (and wonderful) push to get more children to start gardening that in a decades time these ideas may be more than throwaway trends – this may be how people live, as important to a household as the television or a hot shower.

We live in interesting times, and more importantly have the ability to shape these times by the way we garden right now…

Garden Design Trends for 2015

To the crux of this blog then, and this year our inspiration for garden design trends comes from the Gardenista website:

1) Black fences.

2) Painted house numbers.

3) Edible microgreens (we grew cress on a windowsill as a child. Now you get coriander and basil… Mark Diacono and Lia Leendertz talk here about microgreens.)

4) Stained raised beds.

5) Bamboo accessories.

6) Mini meadows.

7) Brown blooms (as in, don’t cut down your perennial borders until the spring…)

8) Floral confetti (inside and outside the home.)

9) Ribbon driveways (where grass grows between the slabs that have been laid.)

10) Forced bulbs (to bring spring a little earlier…)

It is interesting that they are less plant based than Gardens Illustrated. Yet grow your own still has influence on the list.

Designer Andrew Fisher-Tomlinson wrote this about trends for 2015:

“… the influence of designers is being overtaken by grass roots gardening and a desire to get more from the landscapes and plants that we use. As a result it is less likely that we will see any big fashionable trends in 2015 but more a move towards a relaxed style where rurality and the individual merits of shrubs in particular will be more valued.”

We wonder if Andrew is right when he talks about the influence of designers diminishing – the tools are there for people to learn what they need to learn, the cultural zeitgeist appears to be heading towards getting your hands dirty, getting outside, producing something by your own skill rather than just consuming – maybe he has it spot on? We wrote before about this interview with John Sales in ‘A Garden Design Problem… And A Solution’ where he suggests every act you make in the garden is an act of design – the process is more important than the starting point. Maybe Garden Consultant, someone who works alongside you for a decade, will be a better job title than Garden Designer?

In 2014 we were asked by a client to design his garden using only shrubs and trees – he didn’t want anything to do with fashionable meadows or great swathes of perennials competing against one another. We balked a little bit – it has been a long time since we have been asked for a garden that is primarily woody – and it shook our composure to stop thinking in terms of layers of plants that compete with each other for space and nutrients, and to return again to the slower, stronger structures shrubs provide in a garden.

This client did something wonderful for us – he forced us to reorientate our thoughts about garden design and stop allowing our ideas to ‘trend’ towards packed perennial borders. It was a fantastic project and we hope to have more like it over the next year.

The garden doesn’t stop growing, neither should the way we think about our garden spaces – so good luck in your 2015 horticultural endeavours, whether you follow the latest trends or make a trend of your own!

Here you can read Part 2 of Garden Design Trends 2015.

For more reading, why not see our mischevious thoughts on Contemporary Garden Design.

Apr14

Topiary, The Art Garden at The Henderson

The Art Garden at The Henderson in Hong-Kong has now opened to the public. I joined the project last March, to work with Gillespies Landscape Architects on the topiary that had been designed for the Art Garden, which gives a calm, green space below the extraordinary Henderson skyscraper designed by Zaha Hadid Architects. The garden has been designed with butterflies in mind, so lots of nectar plants, and has other art projects and installations within its footprint. The history of the site is interesting too – it was originally the first cricket ground in Hong-Kong! So still a green space….! …

READ MORE

Apr14

ClipFest 2025

On Sunday June 22nd there will be Clipfest 2025 at Ichi-Coo Park in Surrey. It is a celebration of all things pruning and topiary, and I will be there in my capacity of teacher at the European Boxwood and Topiary Society to demonstrate tool cleaning and sharpening, and how to clip. Tickets can be found here on Eventbrite. We are hoping for great weather and to see lots of keen pruners getting their shears out and joining us at this amazing garden! And for more on topiary…

Feb27

Secateur Holders

A present arrived from Norway today, from a student who visited last February to work with Chris Poole and I on learning topiary. His new hobby – a beautiful and neatly stitched secateur holder. Thrilled with this! The holder will save me keep losing my secatuers too…! Thank you Bernt! It was the same student who introduced me to the APA with whom I am doing a talk at the end of March. Tickets can be bought here for ‘Defining The Essence – Aesthetic Pruning in the Garden’. Do join the European Boxwood and Topiary Society for that!