8 Fall Flower Box Ideas To Dress Up Your Windows

If you consider window boxes a decidedly springtime pursuit, let these fall flower box ideas change your mind. From edible cabbages with volume, texture, and color to spare to plumes of spiky salvias that bring saturated moody hues, these unexpected fall flower box ideas are bound to be a treat. Want to make even more of your autumnal elements? Just about any of these ideas can get an extra dose of fall with the addition of small pumpkins or gourds. Simply add them anywhere a little filler is needed.

<p>Laurey W. Glenn</p>

Laurey W. Glenn

If you’re looking for fall container ideas that don’t involve window boxes, you can convert any of these combinations to a standard pot. Use these ideas as a jumping-off point to create the ideal autumn display for your unique space, sun or shade preferences, and USDA planting zone.

Build a Seasonal Box

The structure and height of dwarf Alberta spruce can act as a foundational plant in your window boxes with supporting floral elements like pansies, violas, and trailing English ivy vines creating a blanket of texture and color below. Toward the back of the box, fill with kales to add volume. As the season progresses, be sure to remove frost-bitten, spent, or sunburnt flowers. Swap out the cool weather flowers in the springtime to evolve your boxes for a fresh season.

Give It the Arrangement Treatment

Laurey W. Glenn; Styling: Buffy Hargett Miller
Laurey W. Glenn; Styling: Buffy Hargett Miller

If you need to set up a window box in a flash, treat it like a living arrangement. Keep the flowering elements in their containers and arrange a variety of greens (again, still in their containers) like ‘Ogon’ sedum, creeping Jenny, and ‘Lemon Ball’ sedum around them. Mini-white pumpkins can be used to fill out the arrangement. When time allows, you can either choose to plant the elements or disassemble the window box and use the flowers, greenery, and vines elsewhere.

Go Green

Laurey W. Glenn
Laurey W. Glenn

When everything else is bursting in shades of red, orange, and yellow, add another hue with a window box brimming with green. Horticulturist Tracee Lund of Potted Pleasures in Charleston, South Carolina, created this arrangement with ‘Aaron’ white caladium, ‘White Nancy’ spotted dead nettle, ‘Key Lim Pie’ heuchera, light pink periwinkle, ivy, and holly fern.

Pack a Color Punch

Laurey W. Glenn
Laurey W. Glenn

This combination of ‘Penny Lavender Shades’ violas and ‘Strawberry Sundae’ twin spurs will bring cold weather color to your window boxes throughout the fall season, even if planted in a window box with shade. Don’t try to plant these varieties too early in the season though. They’ll need cool weather to thrive, so the ideal time to plant is during the autumn when scorching summer temperatures have officially made their way out.

Give It Legs

Hector Manuel Sanchez
Hector Manuel Sanchez

For window spots on a porch, consider using a rectangular, legged container to give the effect of a window box without the hassle of installation. To create a similar display, start with fall mums in an orange hue, and layer in both vines and evergreen elements for a mix of spillers, thrillers, and texture.

Make It An Attraction

Photo: Laurey W. Glenn
Photo: Laurey W. Glenn

Petunia hybrid 'Supertunia Vista Bubblegum' will attract pollinators to keep your garden buzzing well into fall. Plant it toward the front of your window box so it trails over the edges. Use coleus toward the back middle to build height. On either side of the box group together upright angelonia and textural geraniums.

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Make It Moody

Robbie Caponetto; Design: Mark Thompson
Robbie Caponetto; Design: Mark Thompson

Deep purples and lush greens create an autumn combination that is far from ho-hum. Purple asters, ornamental cabbage, and the gently curving spikes of Mexican bush sage are all about the drama. Use this combination in your window boxes to complement a home with dark siding or use it for a saturated pop of color against brick, stone, or wood facades.

Build an Edible Box

<p>Southern Living</p>

Southern Living

A bounty of leafy greens, violas, and mums creates a lush arrangement that will set your window boxes with seasonal color. The greens will require afternoon shade and plenty of water so keep that in mind when determining if this arrangement will work for your space or location.

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Read the original article on Southern Living.