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hollander lavender edging along gravel path
Charles Mayer

29 Plants That Make for Captivating Walkway Borders

These beautiful edging plants are sure to add interest and color to your garden.

By and Kathleen Penton

Plants are a natural choice for walkway borders whether the swooping line of a tightly shorn boxwood leading to a dramatic sea view or the soft edge of hostas on the charming path to a poolside patio. After all, like a room without baseboards, a garden without walkway borders is unfinished.

Don't underestimate the impact edging plants can have on defining an outdoor room and laying out a dreamy path through your back yard. Traditionally many gardeners turn to brick, stone, or steel borders to help keep flowers in their beds and grass out. However, by using a plant like an evergreen shrub, you can create a much softer look that appeals more to a wildly beautiful, inviting aesthetic. Plus, the plant possibilities are as numerous as you can imagine—from flowering shrubs like hydrangeas and rhododendrons to cottage garden plants like lady's mantle and catmint. Almost any plant can be an edging plant if it serves your intended purpose, but the classics are low-growing plants that form the bottom tier of landscape design.

Here, we propose the best plants for garden borders and paths, each with its own selling features (some are great plant choices for shade, while others would be perfect alongside a stunning outdoor fountain). Whether your outdoor room needs a sharp contrast to a romantic seating area or a dose of classic French-inspired flair (hello, lavender!), let these VERANDA-approved ideas for walkway borders help guide your eye. Read on for the best edging for flower beds, potager gardens and more.

Thrift

sea thrift flowers by polzeath beach
AL Hedderly//Getty Images

This perennial’s petite pink pom-pom flowers bring cheer to borders from late spring to early summer. Even when not in bloom, its grassy foliage is attractive at the front of a bed. Drought-tolerant thrift thrives in full sun and is hardy in Zones 3–9.

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Impatiens

colorful impatiens flower in bloom
Feifei Cui-Paoluzzo//Getty Images

If you don’t want to wait for blooms, then you need impatiens. Their irregularly shaped flowers in vibrant purple, pink, red, orange, yellow, or white appear almost as soon as you plant them along a path. One of the easiest annuals to grow, impatiens blossom nonstop and can endure the heat with consistent watering. To avoid the common issue of downy mildew on leaves, try Beacon impatiens or Sunpatiens.

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Creeping Juniper

close up of branch of juniperus horizontalis blue carpet, commonly known as creeping juniper, adorned with blue green needles, cultivating in botanical garden
Iuliia Burmistrova//Getty Images

Add a consistent frame to your seasonal garden with this low-growing evergreen shrub. Creeping juniper doesn’t require pruning unless it spills over walkways and is drought tolerant once established so you can plant it in full sun and forget it.

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Dianthus

sweet william dianthus flowering plants, perennials in the garden with delicate multiflower heads in a variety of colours, red, pink purple and white
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Smaller varieties of this showy flowering herb can work well as edging plants, providing not only a pretty pop of color but also a pleasant clove-like fragrance. Regular deadheading keeps the blooms coming as well as the butterflies and hummingbirds that feed on their nectar.

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Lamb’s Ears

stachys byzantina plant
By Eve Livesey//Getty Images

Incorporate some texture into a colorful border with lamb’s ears. Its fuzzy silver foliage pairs particularly well with purple flowering plants. This tough perennial herb tends to spread in most types of soil to form dense ground cover, so if used as an edger, you’ll need to keep it in line.

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Dahlia

summer flowers, dahlia flowers, pink flower garden bloom
Jena Ardell//Getty Images

With all the sizes, shapes, textures, and colors of dahlias, it might be hard to pick just one to accent your border garden. Go for a mix of bulbs to get multiple styles of blooms. Dahlias behave like perennials in warmer regions but annuals in cooler climates. In Zones 1–7, overwinter by carefully digging up the tubers in the fall and storing them in a cool, dark place in slightly damp peat moss or sawdust to prevent a difficult decision about which variety to plant next year.

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Astilbe

astilbe
LordRunar//Getty Images

Add this perennial for a hint of long-lasting color in a partially shaded border. Depending on the variety, astilbe boasts plumelike flowers of white, pink, or red from mid-spring to late summer. Its fernlike bronze and green foliage provides a nice textural contrast to plants with large, broad leaves like heucheras and hostas.

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Daylily

daylilies
bauhaus1000//Getty Images

Though its dozens of bell-shaped flowers are short-lived, the daylily’s mounds of green foliage make it a solid edging plant choice for spring through fall. Plant lots of varieties for a long-term display of color. This popular perennial, which blooms in colors from yellow to red, mixes well with any palette.

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Coral Bells

pink heuchera or coral bells leaves
Melissa Ross//Getty Images

Coral bells’ feathery spikes of tiny pendant flowers in spring and summer aren’t the main attraction for most gardeners. Instead its vibrant, saturated foliage is sought to play up the colors of other border plants. A variety with dark purple leaves makes yellow flowers glow, and caramel-colored leaves bring out the tones of green leaves.

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Sedum

pink sedum blooms
Grace Cary//Getty Images

Upright sedum varieties form vertical clumps and are ideal for adding fall flair along the front of sun-drenched borders. Also known as stonecrop, this perennial holds up well in heat and drought and attracts butterflies and other pollinators to your garden.

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Catmint

blue catmint, okayama prefecture, honshu, japan
YOSHIHARU NUGA/a.collectionRF//Getty Images

Use catmint to soften a border’s edge and provide contrast to spiky plants like irises and yuccas. Its purple-and-blue blooms pair well with pink and yellow flowers. If you cut the foliage back after this perennial blooms, then you can enjoy two to three flushes of color each season.

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Rhododendron

rhododendrons and picket fence
Getty Images

A crowd favorite for their explosive purple and pink flowers, rhododendrons grow in a surprising number of shapes and sizes. Look for medium-sized shrubs that thrive in dappled sunlight when using rhododendrons as borders.

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Irish Moss

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This herbaceous perennial happens to be one of the most versatile gems in the garden, as it can fill in between pavers or serve as a verdant border of a rock garden. Little white flowers pop up throughout the growing season when planted in full light.

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Moss Rose

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Moss rose is a superb choice for dry climates, as it is drought tolerant and thrives in full sun. The bright-flowered annual typically doesn't spread outside of where it's initially sowed, making it a reliable edging plant for pathways or smaller flower beds.

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Liriope

liriope
Getty Images

In its early stages of life, liriope tends to look like any old type of tall grass, but it's a herbaceous perennial that blooms striking lavender-colored flowers in the heat of late summer and early fall. The sturdy foliage stands tall as an edging plant and even prevents erosion in the garden.

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Fern

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Plant lush green ferns along shaded driveways and woodland paths or in dappled light. Because ferns prefer moist soil, they thrive when used as edging plants beside streams or ponds.

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Creeping Thyme

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This ornamental herb, which boasts pretty purple flowers, makes for a fragrant ground cover ideal for lining steps or between pavers on patios or terraces. When crushed, the flowers emit a fresh herbal scent. Plant this deer-resistant ground cover in full sun to partial shade.

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Fountain Grass

fountain grass
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Ornamental grasses such as fountain grass are ideal for planting along borders, paths, or driveways that receive full sun. Dwarf varieties grow to two to three feet tall and three feet wide and feature fine green foliage in the summer that produces pinkish "foxtail" blooms in late summer to early fall.

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Mophead Hydrangea

mophead hydrangea macrophylla
Getty Images

These medium flowering shrubs—which produce blooms in shades of pink, blue, purple, and white—work well for lining paths and driveways in partial shade and separating gardens into smaller spaces. Their size also makes them ideal as standalone edging plants or for layering with other edging plants, like ferns or hostas.

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Boxwood

hoerr schaudt outdoor fountain veranda
Scott Shigley

The pairing of boxwood and roses (here, Iceberg roses) is a classic, with the strong lines of the boxwood tempered by the abundance of the roses draping overhead. Designed by landscape architects Hoerr Schaudt, with Christina Rottman, this elegant contemporary garden has a backdrop of mountains and the sea, dual senses echoed in the curving design of the lush boxwood against the pebble mosaic.

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Headshot of Ashley Leath
Ashley Leath
Ashley Leath is the Copy/Research Editor for Country Living and Veranda magazines. She also organizes the Country Living Front Porch Book Club and Veranda Sip & Read Book Club.
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