Ode to the houseplant
Plants have an enormous effect on the mood indoors! Now the outdoor season is slowly coming to an end, it’s time to get creative with houseplants.
Plants have an enormous effect on the mood indoors! Now the outdoor season is slowly coming to an end, it’s time to get creative with houseplants.
When autumn arrives, most gardens are often a faded glory. But this doesn’t mean you have to look at bare branches right through to spring. There are lots of plants which will simply stand up to the cold, such as Brassica.
Here we stand before a cheerful, playful and summery colour palette, inspired by the eighties. Vivid orange accentuates matte lilac tones, light pink-lilac leaning towards lavender and harebell blue. The result exudes calm and, simultaneously, a need not to be too serious.
Moss can be compared to a green carpet, that somehow looks enchanting and mysterious. There are multiple kinds of moss, different in colour and texture, each with its own purpose. Great for in the garden, or how about a moss painting to green up the indoors?
Making people happy with a plant! That is the mission of Pligt Professionals. With craftsmanship and passion, this grower produces blooming surprises season after season. This time, we are putting Amorosa Line roses centre stage.
The brighter the sun, the more flowers grow, and we’re happy that so many flowers are available again. One flower even more beautiful than the next. Besides the undisputed queen of summer, the sunflower, there are lots of other flowers that trigger that same happy summer feeling.
Majestic and impressive: what better way to describe the Gladiolus? This 'hero' shoots upward like a rocket from where it shows off a wide range of colours from late spring until well into autumn.
Summer’s end doesn’t have to mean the days of endless backyard flower parades are over. There is one hardy plant that refuses to give in to the shorter days, and continues to surprise us with its many coloured blooms even as the air gets crisp. Four reasons to celebrate our beloved ball chrysanthemum.
Montana Lisianthus has been specialising in growing Lisianthus cut flowers for more than 30 years. Back then, this flower was called Eustoma. The nursery produces year-round and is located on the outskirts of Poeldijk, in the heart of the greenhouse horticulture region of the Dutch Westland.
Everyone needs help to grow, and so do climbing plants. That’s why climbing poles are used: a pillar on which they can lean to grow in heights and gain strength to shine.