

Flowers and plants: they make the wall
With the right pots, you can turn your plants into wall decorations that will breathe life and change into your décor and empty surfaces.
To spruce up the rooms in my flat and bring nature in, I use flowers and plants that are sometimes fresh sometimes dry which I arrange, in general, and on windowsills and tables. But that was before, because I've just found another function for my walls. With the right pots for them, hanging plants and dried flowers enhance my interior.


I fell in love with the 'Speckled' terracotta jug from Ferm Living, which is covered in an off-white hue that stands out subtly against the whiteness of the wall. Hanging in my living room, it currently contains a bouquet of craspedies. I have a soft spot for dried flowers, as they don't need water, and the clay jug - which a simple nail is enough to hang because of its featherweight - so doesn't need to be unhooked.
To add a touch of freshness to my home, I regularly change the flowers, happily putting together bouquets of poppies or lavende.
It's not just dried flowers that express all their beauty in these pots, but hanging plants too, which grow vertically, caressing the walls they inhabit as they go. Climbing plants sublimate part of a photo gallery, a two-dimensional surface to which they add a certain dimension that allows the whole setting to be felted. Green lily, climbing philodendron or ceropegia? It doesn't matter, a vertical indoor garden will dress up the bareness of your walls.
In my next article, I'll tell you a little more about pots and the methods used to hang your plants from the ceiling and give the impression that they're floating. So follow me to receive information at full blast!
Like a cheerleader, I love celebrating good design and bringing you closer to everything furniture- and interior design- related. I regularly curate simple yet sophisticated interior ideas, report on trends and interview creative minds about their work.