Plant a Seasonal Southern Basket

These simple arrangements make the perfect gifts for a friend or your own table.

White and Green Basket

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

White and Green Basket

Start With an Original
We chose a honeysuckle basket made by Virginia artist Anne Scarpa McCauley (www.honeysucklebaskets.com). Measuring 20 inches wide x 9 inches deep, it’s generous enough to hold several 1-gallon and quart-size pots. Before you make your arrangement, line the basket with foil or a plastic bag to protect it.

Pick Your Plants
For the white-and-green arrangement shown at left, Kris used one ‘Christmas Gift’ amaryllis, two hydrangeas, two maidenhair ferns, three kalanchoes, and three variegated ivies. Begin by placing the amaryllis and hydrangeas, leaving them in their pots. Tuck in ferns, kalanchoes, and ivies. Where space is tight, remove plants and soil from the pots, and place them in plastic sandwich bags. This works especially well with trailing vines such as ivy.
 

Cover the Pots

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Cover the Pots

Where space is tight, remove plants and soil from the pots, and place them in plastic sandwich bags. This works especially well with trailing vines such as ivy.

Hide the tops of pots with decorative sheet moss. Insert a few interesting branches, such as redtwig dogwood or corkscrew willow, to keep your amaryllis standing tall.

Enjoy the Look Even Longer

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Enjoy the Look Even Longer

Changing out your arrangement is easy to do. Once flowers fade (in about a month), lift and replace with peach-hued Rieger begonias (Begonia x hiemalis) and yellow kalanchoes to create the look seen in the photo at left. If you are a stickler for details, you can even swap out the white variegated ivy for some with yellow margins. These sunny tones will perk up even the dreariest winter day.

 

 

 

Keys To Success

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Keys To Success

  • Start with well-watered plants; soil should be moist.
  • Once you’ve placed plants in plastic bags, don’t be afraid to squeeze the soil to make it fit into a tight space.
  • Adjust the height by placing overturned pots or wads of foil beneath plants.
  • Put moisture right where you want it by watering plants with a turkey baster.

Split White Oak Basket

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Split White Oak Basket

No Southerner should be without at least one piece of regional art. Long after the flowers are gone, these beautiful baskets make wonderful keepsakes and help to tell a story of where you’re from. Here are two other Southern favorites.


Artist: Terry Gibson, Fayetteville, Arkansas (www.gibsonbaskets.com). This basket was purchased at the Kentuck Festival of the Arts in Northport, Alabama.

Sweetgrass Basket

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Sweetgrass Basket

Artist: Ann Simmons, Charleston, South Carolina. (She’s often found on Meeting Street near the corner of Broad Street.)

Basket Making Books

Van Chaplin / styling Leigh Anne Montgomery, Rose Nguyen

Want To Learn More?

Check out one of these books.

  • By Southern Hands: A Celebration of Craft Traditions in the South, by Jan Arnow
  • Collecting Traditional American Basketry, by Gloria Roth Teleki
  • American Baskets: A Cultural History of a Traditional Domestic Art, by Robert Shaw
 

Printed from:
http://www.southernliving.com/home-garden/gardens/plant-a-seasonal-southern-basket-00400000032772/