Contextes de border pour le sens abstrait

Lien: http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/design/how-to-create-an-eye-catching-flower-garden-border.htm


garden border
Image by Marsanne Petty Strolling down a winding garden path in late
--
daisies, and yarrow, I noticed that flanking each side of the path were
the most amazing garden borders I had ever seen. I’m not talking about
the metal hoops painted white that you buy at Wal-Mart, or that boring
black tubing at your landscape supply store either. No, these borders
were clearly constructed with love to complement the flowers they were
--

Natural products can make the very best borders. The path under my feet
was composed of small river stones of various subtle shades of blue,
grey, and red while the border between the path and the flower bed was
constructed of large, almost white, driftwood logs. The landscape
--

Flower garden borders don’t have to be prominent. Down the path from
where I was sitting, the driftwood border that had followed me from
where the rocky path began, simply disappeared. The flowers that grew
there spoke for themselves; a border was unnecessary. The garden was
well-kept and simple with a few ferns growing under the shade of a
--

The border of the flower bed doesn’t have to be confined to the edge.
As I walked further along the path, past the fig tree, the border began
to take shape again alongside the path. Large, odd-shaped smooth rocks
--

Water can provide the best border of all. Just around the next corner
at the crest of the small hill was a gentle waterfall, spilling over a
--
would have to discard my own notions of what a traditional flower
garden border is and begin to dream a little. At my home we have lots
of old logs too large to throw in the fireplace, so I cut a few up into
--
and the informal landscape was definitely beginning to take shape.
Creating a garden border that will add beauty and intrigue to your
landscape is simply a matter of letting your imagination explore the