Comments Off | Wednesday, December 2, 2009
We all want to decorate, but this year we may all be a little strapped for both money and ideas. Here’s a seasonal tip from American Home Shield Inc:
Hoping to get your front lawn into the holiday spirit? It’s all about simplicity and natural elegance
Turning your front lawn into a wonderful winter landscape doesn’t have to be a major undertaking. Just a few choice accents and holiday-inspired ideas can do the trick: here are a few ideas to get into the spirit. No need to tackle them all – any one of the following tips can be used to create a tasteful touch of holiday cheer.
Dress your windows by filling window boxes with cedar and boxwood boughs and sticking baby’s breath sprigs into blocks of florist’s foam. Your cut greens will typically survive through the winter if you ensure that the boxes are not in direct sunlight and brought indoors if the temperature drops significantly. Winter-hardy evergreens, like dwarf conifers, are available in a variety of textures and colors. For deeper boxes, plant evergreen shrubs or small cypresses and garnish them with small white birch branches or pinecones.
A vintage sled is the perfect rustic touch perched near your front door. Lean it up against an adjacent wall and decorate it with pinecones, red bows, wire stars or a string of tiny white lights for added holiday spirit.
No antique sleds lying around? Simple wire baskets placed on the porch or near the front door (filled with winter greenery and pinecones) can create a simple yet festive holiday welcome with a natural appeal.
Garland is a winter holiday must-have. If you’re fortunate enough to have either an old-fashioned lantern post or a white picket fence (or both; a picturesque base for any winter scene), wrap rolls of garland around or through them and they’ll really pop against a fresh snowfall.
On your porch, echo the green garland theme from your fence but use even more detail. With thin wire, weave in an assortment of pinecones, durable outdoor ornaments (save the delicate ones for indoor decoration), magnolia leaves and red winterberries. Ornamental kale can add a colorful burst of natural beauty as well.
Retrieve your wheelbarrow from the shed and use it as a holiday prop on the lawn by filling it with some potted plants (like evergreen). Even better: adorn them with mini-strings of white lights.
A wreath is a classic visual element at this time of year. Put a modern spin on the holly wreath by using tiny green apples. Weave bunches of leaves onto a wire ring, push florist’s picks through the apples and stick them into the wreath. Add the requisite huge red ribbon to finish the look.
If you do have bigger landscape plans, or you feel your front lawn could use an overhaul, now is the perfect time of year to launch your project. According to landscape designer Joel Loblaw from Earth Inc., planting new bushes and trees at this time of year is a great idea but, like puppies, they aren’t just for Christmas. “Think about shape, size and structure prior to planting,” says Loblaw. “Don’t overpower the surroundings with a tree that will destroy your garden in 20 years. Plant material like Serviceberry bushes are ideal to plant right now and the impact is immediately delightful. But you have to think about how what you plant now will fare next year and in the seasons to come.”
