Color brings energy, personality, and life to any landscape. From residential front yards to resort entrances, the strategic use of color can transform a space into a welcoming and memorable environment. Whether you’re highlighting a front entryway, business signage, or a community focal point, well-planned landscape color creates lasting impact.
Why Color Matters in Landscaping
High-profile properties like theme parks, resorts, upscale retailers, and desirable neighborhoods rely heavily on annual color to attract attention and enhance curb appeal. Annual flower beds are commercially replaced every 2–3 months (or 4–6 times per year, depending on climate) to keep landscapes fresh and appealing.
Ever wonder why theme parks replace stunning spring flower beds even while they’re still in peak bloom? Landscape professionals know that planting summer annuals 4–6 weeks before the heat arrives allows plants to establish strong root systems, making them more resilient to high temperatures, sun, and humidity.

Choosing the Right Plants for the Right Season
Just like some plants thrive in sun while others prefer shade, seasonal compatibility is key to success with color.
- Cool-season annuals: Thrive in mild winters or Mediterranean climates, but cannot survive summer heat and humidity.
- Warm-season annuals: Flourish in heat and humidity, but quickly fade with frost.
- Shade-loving species: Struggle in full sun.
- Sun-loving species: Sparsely flower and decline in shade.
Understanding these distinctions ensures your landscape stays colorful year-round.
The Psychology of Color in Landscapes

Color doesn’t just enhance aesthetics—it influences emotions and behavior.
- Red, yellow, and blue: Theme-park studies show that bold and favorite combinations encourage people to relax and linger longer.
- Retail environments: Merchants strategically use color to inspire customers to spend more time (and money).
- Healthcare settings: Hospitals incorporate flowers in atriums and healing gardens to lift moods, reduce anxiety, and lower blood pressure.
- Food displays: Grocery stores often package tomatoes in green containers because green is opposite red on the color wheel—making tomatoes appear more appealing and more flavorful. (That’s why many theme park sidewalks are shaded red to make the grass appear greener.)
Flowers and colorful foliage have a proven ability to evoke positivity, happiness, and even physical relaxation.
Adding Color with Containers and Hanging Baskets

Flower beds aren’t the only way to use color. Ornamental containers raise color to seating height, and hanging baskets display color at eye level providing flexibility and design variety.
Pro tip: Use lightweight plastic pot liners (widely available at home improvement stores) inside heavy ceramic, clay, or concrete planters. These liners:
- Require less soil to fill
- Make seasonal swap outs quick and easy
- Allow you to pre-plant color for the next season and change them out quickly and seamlessly without moving the heavy ceramic pots.
This technique saves time, reduces mess, and keeps landscapes looking fresh year-round.
Best Plants for Summer Color (Mid-Season Favorites)
If you’re looking for vibrant plants that thrive in hot, humid summer conditions, consider these landscape stars:
- Annuals & Bedding Plants: Vinca, Portulaca, Pentas, New Guinea Impatiens, Coleus
- Flowering Shrubs & Perennials: Ixora, Yellow Allamanda, Firebush, Black & Blue Salvia, Crossandra, Lantana
- Tropical & Foliage Plants: Parakeet Heliconia, Curcuma, Caladiums, Crotons, Hawaiian ti, Dwarf Schefflera arboricola ‘Trinette’
Mixing colorful blooms with variegated foliage ensures variety, texture, and year-round interest.
Final Thoughts

Using color in landscaping is more than just planting flowers—it’s about designing an experience. Thoughtful color placement highlights focal points, influences moods, and creates spaces that feel alive. Whether you’re enhancing a home landscape, a resort, or a business, the right combination of annuals, perennials, and container plants can elevate your outdoor environment into the place you want to be.

