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decorating with houseplants

Tips for decorating with houseplants



We asked an expert to share his favorite tips for decorating houseplants. Folia Collective's Denae Horst shares the best ways to showcase plants and which houseplants work best in each room of the house.


Tips for a Professional Home Plant


It starts with the desire for a new look in your home. You rearrange the furniture, declare, and then you find it: an empty space in your closet. An idea to cheer up every gardener makes your eyes light up - I can put a houseplant in there! But how does this story end for you?


There are places in our homes where there are more plants, but sometimes it is hard to imagine how to implement them. Or the plants you tried may not survive. Danae Horst has enjoyed everything, and she is here to help you decorate your home with houseplants using the same practicality and style.


As an adult, it was inspiring to experience the houseplants withering one by one, after growing up with the mother of a “crazy plant girl” in a home that could be intertwined with nature every day. But Dane's journey from "black thumb" to the houseplant enthusiast (classes, guides, antique gardening books,, and the road paved with unfortunate plants lost by trial and error) with the right plant, location, and knowledge, will probably inspire you. You can grow anything in a place you never thought possible. Dane believes this very passionately, he founded the Folia Collective plant store in Southern California and recently published a book, to give everyone the ability to grow houseplants, vibrant houseplants, and green thumb to others.


Excellent lighting for houseplants

Dane's first advice when you're ready to decorate with houseplants: Do not forget that houseplants are alive. Unlike home décor, they have requirements, and one of the most important requirements is the light source. He recommends getting to know how much sunlight your place receives. Divide it into zones: direct sunlight, bright, indirect light, medium light, and low light. The sunroom shown in the picture here has areas of direct sunlight in front of the windows facing east on the right and fades to medium light near the brick wall.


Houseplant light zones


Direct sun refers to areas that receive at least 1 to 2 hours of sunlight a day. Bright, indirect light is bright for 6 or more hours, but not exposed to the sun's rays for more than 1 to 2 hours a day. Medium-light is transmitted a few feet away from a thin curtain or in direct sunlight. Low light is several feet away from direct sunlight. Evaluate your space for houseplants



After finding the available light, notice how much space there is in each zone. Is there space for the plant on the window sill? Floor space for a large plant stand? Can one hang from the ceiling? List how many plants will work for each light zone. (This way you can avoid buying a plant that is doomed.)


Houseplants for different situations


To help you imagine how to incorporate houseplants in your home, Dane shared his advice on how to pack space with plants in a variety of difficult situations, from low light to bright (there is no room in the closet or plant in this sunroom, but now a dozen plants Hold!). You may be wondering what changes can happen if you find realistic solutions to the dreams of decorating your plant or, as Dane says, “style with plants in mind”. Let’s see what tricks Dane has changed back and forth.


Design tips for decorating a solar room with houseplants


A) A glass fills the empty space in the wall, reflects light, and gives the impression that there are more plants.

B) When the plants are too large for these shelves, take cuttings to make a smaller plant or prune the overgrown stems again.

C) Create balance and find space for some container of plants in the corner of a coffee table or window seat to balance hanging plants.

D) Dig in Danae, a c like Planet Philodendron Recommend joining a Facebook group dedicated to a specific plant family, to find different types of plants that work for your space, especially if you have already succeeded in a plant in the family.


Bathrooms provide less light and more moisture to houseplants


There is not much sunlight in this bathroom with only one north-facing window. Dane suggests two ways to increase the light in the room: use Shearer window treatments or install some growing lights. You need opaque shade to keep this bathroom private, so Crow Light is the best option. Can you find out? The Coframe of Modern Sprout is one of Dane's options. Mounted above the window, the lights that grow above this box, holding a timer, and three to four small containers of vines that crawl out of the frame for some living art. The vines resemble a botanical valence, don’t you think?


Keep plants as close to the window as possible e. Above the cabinet are a bird's nest fern and a prayer plant, both of which thrive in the damp bathroom. Two different humidifiers nest on the window (they are not in the way as the shade is rarely raised).


Perfect plants for bathrooms


A) Prayer plant Maranta leuconeura

Bright first medium light; Without extra moisture, brown edges appear on the leaves

B) Bird's Nest Fern Asplenium nidus

Bright first medium light; Grows well in normal humidity but grows best with extra moisture

C) Calathea Calathea spp. And hybrids

Bright first medium light; Without extra moisture, brown edges appear on the leaves


Use houseplants to decorate the north-facing corner



Since privacy is not an issue, a thin screen instead of blinds or shadows allows more light to pass through this north-facing window. Now you can combine some medium light plants like Chinese Evergreen and All-Green Pothos. A hanging pottery plant and wall-mounted pots utilize the available light. A thin shelf or blunt stand, attached directly to the window sill, will create room to gather plants without stealing a lot of floor space. Or, like this thing, there are medium-sized plants sitting on a small pot window and on a narrow shelf. Snake and ZZ plants are very tolerant of dim light, but that does not mean you are limited: you can find here the addition of four different types of snake plants in deep green, yellow, and cream, and very different shapes. Loads of interest.


Plants that prefer low light

A) Pothos Epipremnum aureum

Bright first medium light; The habit of hanging a plant works well

B) Chinese evergreen Aglaonema spp. And hybrids

Bright first medium light

C) Snake plant Sansevieria species

Any light except direct sunlight; The leaves may be broad or narrow. Short, tall, plain, or variegated, and the habits are cylindrical to wide.

D) ZZ plant Zamioculcas zamiifolia

No light except direct sun

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