"Distressed" garden ornaments

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by ViewAhead, May 23, 2024.

  1. ViewAhead

    ViewAhead Head Gardener

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    I am a person who does not "do" ornaments, inside or out. :) However, I am feeling desperate enough to consider one in a space I have struggled for 24 summers to grow something in. It is part of a raised bed under a dense oak canopy with a giant fatsia alongside. It is very dry and has very low light. A few plants just about survive there, but they don't put on growth at all and I eventually relocate them. Interestingly, no weed has ever taken advantage of the space and even a little ivy has taken about 8 yrs to bulk up by a few inches.

    I would leave it empty if it were not in my direct line of vision from the sofa. Ideally I would love something with white flowers that would shine out, but I can't bring myself to get some fake ones and real ones won't survive. So, I am thinking of a light ornament and I have found these.

    Set Of 3 Antique Sage Green Decoratrive Garden Spheres decorations distressed | eBay

    (The seller has them on their own website slightly cheaper, but I couldn't paste a link.)

    Now, my question is this. I don't really like the distressed, shabby-chic look and I don't want a lump of rusting metal in my garden. Could I paint these to smarten them up and would that prevent rust forming? Or is rust inevitable? Would ordinary metal paint work or is there special stuff for things outside braving the elements?
     
  2. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    Hammerite/Smoothrite was always good.
     
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    • OwdPotter

      OwdPotter Gardener

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      @ViewAhead
      ‘Hammerite’ would be my suggestion. Hard wearing, available in about 10 basic colours last time I used it and in either smooth or hammered finish, like orange peel (looks better than it probably sounds)
      Painting the inside of the smaller sphere is going to be tricky whatever you use.
      Do them somewhere that you can tie them up whilst you paint them such as to a joist in the garage or similar.
       
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      • ViewAhead

        ViewAhead Head Gardener

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      • Plantminded

        Plantminded Head Gardener

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        How dark is your very low light @ViewAhead? I've been surprised at how adaptable Erigeron Karvinskianus is around my garden, including shady places. I think you grow it too. Could you try it in a container perhaps? If not, I like your alternative:)!
         
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        • ViewAhead

          ViewAhead Head Gardener

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          I have tried things in containers, so I can up the moisture level, but even plants that allegedly like deep shade struggle, eg carex, ferns, ivy, etc. Some epimediums are coping at the front, but behind these, hemmed in by fence and fatsia, and overhung by low oak (protected, so untrimmable), even weeds object! :) I can't bear to watch things being miserable.
           
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          • amancalledgeorge

            amancalledgeorge Super Gardener

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            Shame you don't like those open spheres in a rusted finish, it makes them look a lot softer in the landscape. For painting you should be able to disassemble and make the job much easier. They are usually held together with a bolt.
             
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            • JennyJB

              JennyJB Keen Gardener

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              Is there space to make a border or an island bed in front of the raised bed, away from the canopy and root zone of the oak, so that the bare area is masked from your sofa viewpoint?
               
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              • ViewAhead

                ViewAhead Head Gardener

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                The only problem then is symmetry, @JennyJB. My garden design (:) big word, little plot) relies on straight lines for the structure, with the plants adding the waves. So the raised bed is a mirror image of one at the top of the garden at the other side, with 2 other offset raised beds along the long edges and two bits of lawn and bed offset within that in L-shapes, all joined by a gravelled bit that leads from top to bottom visiting all the beds and crossing side to side staggered 3 times. Which all sounds very complicated, but it works in a garden 3 times longer than wide. If the raised bed wasn't there and it wasn't 18" tall, the "gap" to be filled would be at ground level and not noticeable with all the other plants between my sofa and it. However, as the dark, hollow space is exactly at eye-level, it draws my gaze.

                @amancalledgeorge, I might try them as they are and see how they look, but wanted to know about paint just in case de-distressing them proves necessary. :biggrin:
                 
                Last edited: May 24, 2024
              • JennyJB

                JennyJB Keen Gardener

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                Ah I see. I don't think of symmetry in a garden because mine is all shapes that don't lend themselves to formal symmetrical designs.

                If the ornament you're thinking of doesn't work out, maybe something could be hung from the lower branches of the tree if that's allowed on a protected tree - bird feeders, dreamcatchers, whatever to break up the visual "hole". Or maybe have a structure underneath if the branches aren't too low - fancy compost bin that looks like a beehive, snazzy bug hotel, whatever takes your fancy.
                 
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                • Selleri

                  Selleri Koala

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                  Hi @ViewAhead , could you fit in a small pond?

                  I had a corner where nothing grew and dug in a cheapy pre-formed pond. It's now the favourite spot for birds and as it is mostly shaded, there are no algae problems. I only have oxygenating plants and rocks in it, plus a small solar fountain.
                  pond.jpg
                   
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                  • ViewAhead

                    ViewAhead Head Gardener

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                    I love the idea, @Selleri, but I think birds would avoid it as there is a lot of cover and fence top for a cat to sit on ... and a new, very predatory one has moved in nearby. Plus, huge amounts of leaf litter and sticky gung from the oak would fall in all the time.
                     
                    Last edited: May 23, 2024
                  • ViewAhead

                    ViewAhead Head Gardener

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                    A snazzy bug hotel might work very well! :blue thumb: Currently I have put a small mirror there, within the frame of an old, white, globe-shaped lampshade, and that really has brightened it up.
                     
                  • ViewAhead

                    ViewAhead Head Gardener

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                    So, a little reluctant to share this for fear of gales of laughter reaching me across the ether, but this is my experiment so far! :) Obviously only temporary as not really weatherproof, but it's the sort of effect I am after.

                    IMG_1065.jpeg
                     
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                    • JennyJB

                      JennyJB Keen Gardener

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                      Now that I see the picture, I think I would put something in a big container standing on the gravel area. Maybe a variegated or golden-leafed shrub of some sort.
                       
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