Plant Combinations: 10 Tips For Creating Flower Combinations That Work

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Every year I seem to add a new garden space to my yard. To make sure that I have a garden design I like, I use this process for selecting my garden color scheme and these tips for creating plant combinations. They take the guesswork out of gardening.

Tips for creating plant combinations that work

Like decorating, creating a garden that looks beautiful is part creativity and part science (and sometimes a little bit of luck…those “happy accidents” that happen once in a while).

And just like decorating, there are actually some easy rules you can follow to help your garden look its best.

That’s where these tips for creating plant combinations come in handy.

You’ll  notice that many of these tips revolve more around of the leaves of the plants than the flowers. Since the leaves are usually around longer than the flowers, using them to create interesting plant combinations means they’ll last all season long.

Mix Different Leaf Textures

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Lamb's Ears with other perennials ©mashiki - stock.adobe.com
©mashiki – stock.adobe.com

Different plants have different textures depending on the leaf and flower shape. Those textures help to add interest to your garden.

You can use plant combinations that contrast woolly and smooth leaves, like these woolly lamb’s ears.

Shade plant combination of Hostas and evergreens

Or mix in some pointy leaves, such as these evergreen needles with other plant leaf textures to change things up.

Combine Different Leaf Shapes And Sizes

Shade plant combination of Hostas and ferns

Using different leaf shapes together (such as these feathery ferns with rounded Hosta leaves) gives a similar effect to using different textures.

The different shaped leaves help to create another layer of visual interest that keeps the garden from looking all the same.

Use Different Plant Shapes

Astilbe, Coral Bells, Hosta, Spirea and Hydrangeas in a garden border ©mashiki - stock.adobe.com
©mashiki – stock.adobe.com

Besides the pretty combination of flower and leaf colors in this garden border, another reason this plant combination works is the difference in plant shapes.

In this case, the spiky flowers from the Astilbe really stand out beside the mounded shapes of the Hydrangea and Spirea bushes.

Trees of different shapes in a park ©yolfran - stock.adobe.com
©yolfran – stock.adobe.com

Using evergreens in your garden landscape is a really easy to way to add different plant shapes, since many of them grow in a pyramid form.

This park shows how the pyramid shaped conifers contrast with the rounded shapes of large Rhododendrons and Japanese maples. Although this is on a grand scale, you can re-create a similar look in your own garden on a smaller scale, using smaller trees and bushes.

Clipped hedges ©yolfran - stock.adobe.com
©yolfran – stock.adobe.com

Another option is to create your own garden shapes by growing and pruning plants that don’t mind getting sheared (such as Boxwood and Arborivitae). As long as you’re willing to do a little work to keep the bushes trimmed, you can create all kinds of interesting plant combinations.

Vary the Height

Plant combination with layers of plants
©yolfran – stock.adobe.com

Varying the height of your plant combinations is the next way to add interest to your garden. It creates layers that give your yard that lush, filled-in look.

This generally means planting shorter plants closer to the front of your garden bed and taller ones towards the back. Although as you can see from the massive rose bush in this picture, having some plants that aren’t planted strictly in their designated height zone helps to add some drama.

Include Evergreens

Plant combination with an Azalea, Japanes Maple and Camellia

I always try to include at least a couple of evergreens in every area of my garden. Because they don’t lose their leaves, they add structure to the garden all year round, which I think is an important part of making good plant combinations.

I used this concept to fill in the back corner of my house. Low growing junipers (shortest layer), an Azalea (mid-height layer), and a Camellia (tall layer) form the backbone of this area. And keep it from looking too bare in the winter when the rose (not blooming here), Japanese Maple and Rose of Sharon (also not blooming here) lose their leaves in the fall.

Create A Feeling With Colors

Roses and Clematis

Of course, I couldn’t get away with talking about plant combinations without mentioning color.

Just like in decorating, the colors you choose can have a big impact on whether your garden feels relaxing or energizing. Which means that both leaf color and flower color are  important to creating the feeling you want to have in your garden.

Since there are so many different ways to add this important element to your garden, I wrote a whole other post on the topic of creating garden color schemes, which you can find HERE.

Plant In Groups Of Three

Plant combination with hydrangeas, roses and day lilies ©Barbara Helgason - stock.adobe.com
©Barbara Helgason – stock.adobe.com

If you’re at a loss for where to start with your plant combinations, try choosing just 3 plants – one lower growing, one mid-level height and one taller one that incorporate your color scheme.

If you can, try to work in at least one other area of contrast, whether that’s leaf texture, leaf shape and size, or plant shape.

Then put your plants together and see what you get.

Here, the spiky leaves of the yellow day lilies add some contrast to the more rounded leaf shapes of the roses and hydrangeas. It’s a very simple garden scheme that looks really pretty.

Repeat The Same Plants

Alliums and peonies ©yolfran - stock.adobe.com
©yolfran – stock.adobe.com

I think I have said this before, and probably more than once…but one of the tips for a successful garden design (and good plant combinations) is to repeat the same plant more than once.

This garden bed has a very simple combination of Alliums and Peonies. Even though there isn’t much difference in any of the other design elements (height, texture or shape), it still makes an effective display because they are repeated all the way down the path.

White picket fence with purple salvia and pink roses ©jStock - stock.adobe.com
©jStock – stock.adobe.com

If you take the “plant in groups of three” idea and combine it with repetition, you can create a really pretty border for your fence, front of your house, or beside your driveway.

Choose Plants With The Same Likes

Sun loving plant combination with Lamb's ears, echinacea and daisies ©zollster - stock.adobe.com
Sun loving plant combination with Lamb’s ears, echinacea and daisies ©zollster – stock.adobe.com

This tip isn’t the most exciting of the bunch but it is an important one.

To have the best success with your plant combinations, pick plants that like the same environment. If your spot is gets full sun, make sure all of the plants you choose will thrive in sunny locations. Same goes for soil type, soil PH, and moisture level.

Click HERE to find more information on how to pick the right plants.

Create A Plan

Lastly, this is another tip that I tend to repeat a lot when it comes to gardening…it really helps to have a plan. Those “happy accidents” where things just work out on their own don’t happen often enough to go without one.

That way, you can do some research about where you are putting your plants and which ones you want to combine together. Then make sure they will grow well in your location and look good doing it.

Other Gardening Ideas You Might Like

Have comments or questions on our tips for creating beautiful plant combinations? Tell us in the section below.


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This post was originally published on March 28, 2019 but was updated with new content on September 15, 2022.


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14 Comments

    1. Wanda Simone says:

      Thanks, Mark! That combination sounds pretty.

  1. Jane Anderson says:

    Hi There! Amazing blog! I love to do gardening in my free time and the tips for gardening are very useful for me. All the tips you have shared will help make my garden landscaping look beautiful. Thank you for sharing this amazing blog with us. Keep posting!

  2. Great guide there on flower combinations that can help improve curb appeal. The images are also very stunning and I will try a few flower combinations on my front yard.

  3. Yvonne Bointon says:

    Do I deadhead flowers in pots now or leave them to protect the plant, then dead them after winter for them to re- flowers

    1. Wanda Simone says:

      Hi Yvonne…You can do either. I usually leave the dead flowers on the plants until spring (they provide seeds for the birds). But you can cut them off now if you don’t like the look of them. It shouldn’t hurt the plants.

  4. Jill Lipsitz says:

    Beautiful!!! I’m in a rental and only use containers. Any deer resistant part shade suggestions.

    1. Wanda Simone says:

      Hi Jill…I have one post on deer-resistant plants for shade (which you can find here: https://www.fromhousetohome.com/garden/deer-resistant-shade-plants/) that has some perennials you could grow in containers. However, I’ve been getting a lot of requests for more deer-resistant options, so I’ll be posting some additional deer-resistant lists in the next 3 or 4 weeks.

  5. I like your plant tips. I need to get a landscaper. My lawn is dead. I’ll have to get fertilizer.

  6. Hi,
    Would greatly appreciate ideas on creating a english country or cottage garden. Would like to know best flowers to plant. Love the look of these gardens.

    1. Wanda Simone says:

      Hi Mary…I’ll have to do a post on that 🙂 In the meantime, you can find a pretty good list of plants for a cottage garden from Monrovia (here) and some good ideas for how to structure the garden from Northern Nester (here). I hope that helps!

  7. Antaeus Flowers says:

    Nice information you shared here in this post. Thanks for sharing such a great post with us.

  8. Ethan Smith says:

    Amazing article. Beautiful photographs and your tips. Thanks for sharing these nicest tips.

  9. Ethan Smith says:

    This information has been very helpful, thank you.