Senin, 06 Desember 2021

Bedroom Plant Shelf

Bedroom Plant Shelf

How to Display Houseplants: 98 of Our Favorite Plant-Display Ideas

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I'm a firm believer in the philosophy that one's home can never have too many plants. They breathe life into any room they're placed in, and they come in a dizzying array of sizes, shapes, colors, and more. If you are struggling to find new ways to add more plants to your own at-home jungle, you may find some ideas for fitting more flora in below. If you're just looking to change things up and give your home a new leaf on life, you'll certainly find the plant displays below inspiring. And if you simply do not want to or cannot literally fit any more plants into your home, you'll still enjoy perusing through some of the creative, beautiful, weird, and wild ways in which folks have incorporated plant life into their home.

Hang in there

One of the best/easiest ways to add more plants into your home is simply by hanging them like from the ceiling or in front of a window. What I also love about this idea is the stunning variety of ways in which you can make this look your own. From where you hang, to what you hang, to how you hang, look at some of the ways these house tour participants hung plants in their home and see if it sparks any ideas for you.

This 296-square-foot tiny house has 14 windows, a hammock, a meditation loft, and TONS of plants, including this gorgeous display of leaves. Not only is this a great way to display a lot of plants without taking up a lot of floor space in a small home, but it also becomes a living piece of wall art.

Jewelry designer Bobbi, of Bobbi Made This, has a house that features color and shapes in fresh and fun ways, but there are also some great plant displaying ideas, too. I love the way she incorporated plants in her kitchen, including mixing simple hanging plants in front of the window, with a tall, leafy fiddle leaf in front of the window, plus a couple of cute plants on some corner shelves.

Pairing these botanical, naturally shaped hanging plants in front of a glamorous but geometric wallpaper accent wall is an amazing way to add contrast to a room, as seen in September's cool house.

https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/colorful-maximalist-portland-condo-photos-36879846

Kristin Cedar made an entire plant wall in her cool condo. "The whole 6′ by 6′ wall cost a total of $300 and was so easy to install. I used these giant garment racks that are usually used in retail stores. I attached them to the walls with these brackets. I used a variety of climbing plants with this self-watering hanging wall planter. I used a mix of plants that will grow and spread over time, so the wall will one day be entirely green!"

This pro organizer's 512-square-foot studio has brilliant storage ideas in the kitchen, bathroom, closets, and more, but it's Faith's over-the-kitchen-island idea that has me most excited. She combines keepsakes she's collected over the years in a cute hanging mobile, interspersed with living plants for a one-of-a-kind display.

This South Philly home Has a very cool DIY fireplace, the cutest ever heart-shaped window, and over 100 plants, including this rad planting hanging over the bed, which with its placement feels more like a living chandelier.

Also in that same South Philadelphia home is the hanging plant idea that someone with any size budget or space could use: incorporating one of those affordable rods with containers hanging off of it from hooks.

Intentional displays of plants and art are becoming a huge trend in minimal decor, and with reason: You can take a few treasured items you really care about, blending them together into a composition that itself becomes art. Get inspired by the one spotted in Whitney Mack's New Orleans bedroom.

Cooking with fresh herbs from your own garden is a certain type of delightful pleasure, made even more sweeter when you can also use those growing herbs as an adorable display, like in this cute home.

This 350-square-foot studio apartment cleverly repurposed a clothing rack as a room divider, but made sure that room divider didn't feel too visually heavy, too imposing, or too blocky by using plants to do the dividing.

Alli Hochberg's 550-square-foot rental studio apartment on New York City's Upper East Side has a pretty interesting room divider idea: A coat rack filled with plants helps visually divide the space but also lets in lots of light!

This loft-style apartment situated in the heart of Old City, Philadelphia's most historic neighborhood, has tons of architectural features, like gorgeous brick walls. But I love the way in which they used plants to highlight the mantel area.

An adventurously dreamy home with a touch of golden glam has a couple of great hanging plant ideas, from the cheap IKEA SKURAR planters hung at different heights in front of a window (hung with affordable twine) to the uniform plant collection hanging from a bar installed in the kitchen window.

A blogger's cali bungalow is the perfect mix of beach and boho style, but it also has this cute hanging shelf. She placed a lovely little plant and container combo on top of the shelf to complete the look. This hanging shelf available for purchase on Etsy is similar to the one above.

This adorable 1830s creole cottage in New Orleans has basically 400 things I love, but the simple way in which the owner hung a pothos plant above this furniture piece, and then draped the vines around it to frame it, absolutely makes me swoon.

Have a dull corner in your home? Take an idea from this colorful, thrifty Toronto home and install a little copper pipe, hang a trio of cute air plant holders, and have a stylish plant display in no time. You can get a similarly cute trio of air plants and holders for under $35 bucks from Etsy.

Kill everything that's green? Lean into your talents and opt to hang plants to dry in front of a window, like spotted in this peaceful, poetic natural home in Switzerland. Make it seem intentional, and it'll work.

This couple's romantic Barcelona flat has a reminder that the elements you've installed for storage—like this bar in the kitchen for hanging cooking tools—can also be a great place for a plant or two.

If you're into minimalism or Scandinavian-inspired design, this Nordic style London flat has a super sleek black hanging bar with two plants and a light fixture that might be right up your design alley.

Bathroom jungle vibes

It's not exactly groundbreaking, but I find bathrooms with plants to be one of the most lovely things. I guess because bathrooms always seem so small and/or utilitarian, it's just wonderful when you bring life to the space. The bathrooms below represent some of my favorite ways I've seen plant life showcased in recent years.

If you've got the natural light and the room in a spacious shower, why not let a few big leafy plants live in a corner of your shower stall full time? This cute bunch spotted in a remodeled Montreal Victorian home.

This cute 1980s bungalow renovation has lots of fun details, but I loved the very simple but ultra chic hanging ivy in front of a lovely landscape tapestry in the bathroom.

A cocktail blogger's Palm Springs-inspired bathroom already brings plenty of jungle vibes with the hand-painted wallpaper, and the hanging pothos plant completes the look.

Big, leafy green plants help visually balance the colorful shower curtain in this modern Albuquerque home's boho bathroom.

Quirky ideas you should definitely give a try

Look, plants look good just about anywhere, any way. But if you're seeking ways to really stretch your decor limits, try some of the plant life-displaying ideas spotted in house tours, below:

Pair a perfectly pale pink kitchen with just one or two bright green punches of plant life for a bold modern room that's also incredibly serene, as seen in this pink and cute 1980s bungalow renovation.

Use green plant life to highlight and modernize your home's architecture by draping some vines over a doorway, like they did in this updated 1950s ranch house.

Busts of human heads, torsos, and other figurative shapes have become a trendy home decor item in recent times, and they are a fun way to add a quirky element into a space. Particularly when you combine it with a plant! Doesn't this bust plus plant combo in this studio apartment have a leafy hair vibe?

Combining small green plants with wall-mounted hexagon-shaped wall cubbies is a great way to great a unique, custom wall installation that feels like a modern art piece. As spotted in this 513-square-foot DC condo.

Cyril Sontillano has absolutely FILLED his rental apartment with plants–and frankly, great plant-displaying ideas–but I loved the idea of hanging a plant on the wall and then hanging an empty frame around the hanging plant. Because mother nature really is the ultimate art piece!

Malori Futral's 1949 ranch house in Nashville is a soothing, cool space. And the way she added plants over the art in her dining room–as well as framing the wall opening between the living room and dining room with trailing vines–are simple but creative.

Wellness journalist, author of cookbook "Healthier Together," and host of the Healthier Together Podcast" Liz Moody might only live in 600 square feet with her husband and their cat, but she's made the small home work for her family and their health goals. And I noticed a cute, quirky, and incredibly simple way to display some plants: place them high up on furniture and shelves to add height to your home!

Above/beside the bed

Plants in the bedroom… also not a brand new or genius idea. But I'm a HUGE fan of plants above and beside the bed. It's a fresh way to add greenery and create beautiful bed vignettes that stand out. Below, some of the ways I've seen it done in recent house tours.

Flanking the bed with hanging plants isn't a new idea, but I love how Tracey paired these ferns with a dark green accent wall behind them in her house's bedroom.

Amarachi Ukachu's 550-square-foot rental was refreshed with contact paper, floor cushions, and this neat plant idea in her bedroom. By placing a Pothos plant inside a basket, not only does the basket add luscious texture to the space, but it becomes a much more substantial wall composition.

The co-author of "Plantopedia" has a soothing, plant-filled Australia home, so obviously there are some great plant display ideas. This one is simple but worth noting: Pair a shelf of leafy plants with a gorgeous modern plant photo print and linens with earthy color tones.

This gorgeous, plant-filled Australia home also features one of the most unique WFH setups we've ever seen, but also pay attention to this delightful array of plants that surround this bed, from the planter on the floor, to the planter on a stand, to the variety of plants on the shelf.

Thomas Denning is a horticulturist, so having a plant-packed apartment isn't exactly a surprise. But his bedroom features a great way to add plants to a small space in a simple and lovely way: with a shelf above the bed. His idea stands out because he did an amazing job of layering leaf shapes and heights.

Chanae Richards' Philadelphia home features quite the plant-heavy bedroom. A row of fiddle leaf fig trees takes up residence on one side of the bed, while other leafy green plants fill out the other side. Combined with the oversized botanical mural wallpaper behind the bed, and you have an incredible composition.

This 400-square-foot LA studio apartment really shows the decorative power of lots of plants, and I love how Taylor created a jungle-like nook around her bed by placing her bed frame on a diagonal and filling the corner with plants. It's a novel way to create a distinction with your bedroom area in a studio.

In this Oakland home's bedroom, a few hanging planters is all that's needed to create a lively green display above the bed.

A collector's Hollywood bachelor pad shows just how big of a visual statement a hanging plant can be in the bedroom, especially when mixed with a bold yellow pot and weighty hanging chains.

In the all-white, minimal bedroom in this Nordic-style London flat, three hanging plants add a burst of interest to the design.

A cocktail blogger's Palm Springs-inspired bathroom isn't the only room of the house that's rocking some great plant displaying skills. The bedroom wows with this bright green hanging plant that contrasts beautifully with a boldly patterned bedroom wall.

If your bed is placed in front of a window, consider incorporating the elegant plant hanging display seen in this adventurous, dreamy home.

Symmetry is a powerful design tool, but the opposite is true sometimes, too, as shown above in this eclectic modern country home.

Plant-packed shelves

Have some empty shelves in your home? A powerful visual statement is packing those shelves with plants and pots. It always works and can be a powerful way to make your home feel like a jungle with many small/affordable plants instead of splurging on big and/or expensive plants. See how some of these homeowners and renters did this, below:

Plant-packed shelves make a visual impact in ANY room, but there's something particularly special when used in the entryway, like in this plant-filled Ohio home. It really lets guests know that you love green plants as soon as they walk into the door!

Modern pegboard shelves are so chic and cool, and when married with hanging plants and a simple planter it becomes a way to have a functional display shelf. There's a great example of this idea in architect Anna Castles' Australian home.

I don't think I've ever seen someone use their window valances as shelves, let alone as shelves for art and plants, but this retro modern Australian house has an amazing example.

Into the Wild plant shop owner's Australian house features a stunning variety and amount of plants, and the floating shelves in the living room are bursting with shapely green leaves, making it one amazing art piece over the sofa.

Into the Wild plant shop owner's Australian house also has a plant-filled shelf in the dining room, but it's made even more amazing thanks to the perfect green paint color on the wall behind the plants.

I love that in this Argentina home, affordable industrial-style shelving is combined with a huge array of plants and planters. The sheer amount of the grouping of them creates a bohemian, powerful composition.

Not only is a plant-packed shelf an amazing visual display, it can also "disguise" or distract from less visually pleasing items… like in the kitchen above that features a lot of leafy greens, and a barely-there projector.

Like in the kitchen example above, this Philadelphia home's kitchen also shows how a few plant-packed shelves can help distract/beautify appliances.

Horticulturist Thomas Denning's Melbourne home isn't huge–only 592 square feet–but he's found a novel way to add an absolute WALL of plants: by filling this double bookcase with lots of green plants. Because the shelves are white like the walls, the effect is almost one of a floating plant art installation. And, this is incredibly rental friendly.

This old Airstream was DIYed into a dreamy, minimal, cozy boho home, and it also features a cute miniature plant displaying idea with these hexagon shaped shelves.

This Moroccan-inspired Cape Town apartment hides a cute DIY idea: using glass shelves in front of a window to create a place to house more plants, without hiding the view.

Shelves don't have to be expensive or ruin your rental's walls, exemplified in this sunny plant-filled Chicago loft and the cheap but stylish cinder block + lumber shelf system for plants.

A window sill is basically a shelf, right? Create a shiny array by lining up these succulent-filled gold pots in descending size, like in this Boston interior designer's home.

We stan for plant stands

Want to know the easiest way to literally and figuratively elevate a plant? Plant stands! They can be DIYed, bought new, or found, and they immediately make any plant seem more visually interesting than if it were just placed on the floor alone. Need proof? Check out the ideas below:

This modern and vintage Charleston home has a guest area that features a cute little planter perked up by combining it with a bold DIY paint accent.

Who says a plant stand has to be fancy or expensive? In Amina's home, an IKEA RÅSKOG Utility cart was painted pink to be the perfect affordable and adorable plant stand.

In this shared rental home in Los Angeles' Silver Lake neighborhood, DIY stands hold up plants in front of a window. Though the ones above were made by hand, similar ones can be purchased from Amazon.

Small, simple, and black-thumb resistant

If you're feeling like none of these ideas are for you because you have a black thumb, don't worry you don't have to make do with only fake plants. Or do without any greenery… plant cuttings can be just as lovely around the home. They won't last forever, but they'll still do the trick. I enjoy these two examples in particular:

Pampas grass is always a great idea, and can give off plant-filled vibes without having to keep them alive, as seen in this chic Brooklyn home.

A simple sprig of a maple leaf stick in an architectural vase, when compared with lots of other earthy, woodsy tones, can feel like a plant display without being a live thing. Like in this Washington D.C. condo.

Adrienne Breaux

House Tour Editor

Adrienne loves architecture, design, cats, science fiction and watching Star Trek. In the past 10 years she's called home: a van, a former downtown store in small town Texas and a studio apartment rumored to have once been owned by Willie Nelson.

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Bedroom Plant Shelf

Source: https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/how-to-display-houseplants-36607205

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