Dahlia
Combinations for Gardens and Bouquets
By Melinda Myers
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[February 01, 2025]
Dahlias come in various colors, shapes, and sizes
making them easy to include in any garden, container, and bouquet.
Grow them in their own dedicated space, mix them with other flowers,
or plant a few at the end of the vegetable garden.
Dahlias come in various colors, shapes, and sizes
making them easy to include in any garden, container, and bouquet.
Grow them in their own dedicated space, mix them with other flowers,
or plant a few at the end of the vegetable garden. |
Consider
including different varieties of dahlias for added interest and
beauty in the garden and your arrangements. Select colors that you
imagine will look great together in a vase. This will make it easy
to create a lot of creative combinations on the fly.
Grow dahlias with flowers of different shapes and sizes to create
more interesting arrangements. Dahlias offer many options and it’s
one of the reasons they are such a popular cut flower. Longfield
Gardens provides help and inspiration in Types of Dahlias: 8 Great
Looks.
You’ll find the widest range of colors and styles with new varieties
in the decorative dahlia group continually being released. Add a bit
of elegance to the garden and bouquets with Mondriaan’s soft pink
petals tinged with pastel yellow, apricot, and lavender. Decorative
dahlias make great cut flowers, and their sturdy stems make them
easy to grow with other flowers in gardens and containers.
Add interesting texture to your gardens and bouquets with
anemone-flowered and collarette dahlias. The anemone-flowered
dahlias have a cluster of tubular florets in the center surrounded
by more traditional petals. The two different lengths of petals in
the collarette varieties add to their charm.
Enjoy an abundant harvest of cut flowers when growing ball and
pompon dahlias. These perfectly round flowers are packed with
tightly rolled petals and are long-lived in arrangements. Their size
makes them excellent additions to mixed bouquets helping to connect
the various flowers for an impressive display.
The unique blossoms of waterlily dahlias have made it one of the
most popular for cutting. The relatively flat flowers have tightly
closed centers surrounded by several rows of flat or slightly curved
petals.
Grow a few single dahlias for you and the pollinators to enjoy. The
daisy-like flowers have a prominent center surrounded by a single
row of petals. Their airy appearance complements a variety of
late-season perennials in the garden and bouquets. Mix in a few
peony-flowered varieties for a showier display. These also have a
prominent center but are surrounded by two or more layers of petals.
Add a bit of excitement to any arrangement with cactus and
semi-cactus varieties. Their tightly curled petals make them a
standout in the garden and bouquets.
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You’ll only need one or a few dinnerplate dahlia
blooms to make a statement in a vase or arrangement. The large
flowers can grow up to 10 inches across on four- to five-foot-tall
plants. Tag team a pair of dinnerplate dahlias for the back of the
border. Labyrinth and Tyrell have apricot flowers with pink and
yellow accents that blend nicely with a wide range of colors in the
garden.
If you feel overwhelmed by all the choices or can’t decide on the
best combination, let the experts lend a hand. Consider purchasing
one or more ready-to-plant dahlia combinations selected to look
great in the garden and arrangements. The bumblebee collection
includes pollinator-favorite Kelsey Sunshine collarette and the
coral pink decorative Great Silence. Or for a big splash of purple
try the Berry Spritz dinnerplate collection (longfield-gardens.com)
with lavender-pink, lilac, and eggplant purple blooms.
Take pictures of your favorite combinations and notes of what you
want to try next year, and most importantly, enjoy the fantastic
blooms. Fortunately, any flower combination is sure to brighten your
day.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books,
including the Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and Small
Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow Anything”
instant video and DVD series and the nationally syndicated Melinda’s
Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned
by Summit for her expertise to write this article. Myers’ website is www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com]
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