Garden Arbor Trellis, Rose Blooming, Wedding Decorations
Roses are unmatched for their striking beauty, variety of colors, and unforgettable fragrance. Climbing plants help visually “ground” a garden structure to the landscape. Ivys and creepers make beautiful walls of foliage that glisten in the sun and wave in the breeze. So add the two together and climbing roses are like blooming jewels to use with a garden trellis.
If you are planning a summer wedding, consider using some real live rose plants as wedding gazebo decorations. For a home wedding you can easily plan ahead and plant rose bushes during the fall or two before the year of your wedding. The roses can winter over in the ground as normal and start the spring off with vigorous growth in anticipation of the big summer show.
Another option for outdoor or even indoor weddings is to grow some climbing, standard, or tree roses in containers. Then you can move them to the wedding site a day or more before the ceremony or reception The growing containers need to be large enough to provide ample area for root growth and the soil needs to have good drainage, water retention, and proper nutrients.
Shrub roses and tree roses are more commonly grown in planters and containers. Climbing roses area bit more difficult to establish and control in a container but the added effect can be well worth the effort. All roses require a lot of sunlight and good air circulation to bloom properly and stay free from diseases.
Climbing roses can be tied to the trellis or arch uprights with floral twist ties, ribbon, or other materials to match the decorations or structure. Make sure to wear garden gloves and long sleeves when working with the roses. You don’t want to show scratched up arms in the wedding pictures.
It might even possible to dig up and transplant roses to use on a newly added trellis if they are not too old and well established. You don’t want to damage too many roots during the growing season especially if it is close to your wedding day. A wilted plant and floppy blooms is not what a nervous bride needs to see.
Many old style climbers have been around for generations proving how reliable they can be. New hybrids seem to be introduced just about every year resulting in more color choices, improved disease resistance, longer blooming range, or better hardiness characteristics.
One of the best and most trusted sources of rose plants is Jackson and Perkins. They have been in business for many years and have a large selection of rose varieties to use for in ground and container growing.
Try planting some climbing roses on a rose garden arbor or trellis in your home landscape. And for a really beautiful ceremony setting, definitely consider including live rose plants as part of your wedding decoration ideas.
Selecting Roses For The Garden
Roses are commonly seen climbing a wall or an arbor. For this type of landscape, the true climbing rose is the best choice. True climbing roses can be trained to ma… Read more…
Climbing Roses
There are many ways to use climbing and ramblers roses in gardens and patios. To cover walls, over hedges, small or old trees, in pillars, to cover an arch or arbor.
Versatile Garden Arbors
perennials upward over your arbor will requisite to be trimmed occasionally. quaint climbing roses are a prevalent option for arbors, because many are perfumed and have duplicate blooms.
Roses in Our Wedding Reception
The wedding guests were seated at tables instead of in rows – kate’s idea – and it was lovely. a gorgeous arbor of white climbing roses was at one end of the courtyard.
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Flowering Vines for a Garden Arbor
Flowering vines can really add to the beauty and functionality of a home landscape. If you are considering using a temporary arch in your wedding plans, buy one that can be reused in your home garden. In a previous article we discussed three of the most common landscape vines used to grow on arbors, pergolas, and decks.
There are many more beautiful flowering vines that can make their home on any garden trellis or support. Flowering vines not only add splashes of color to the landscape but also attract wildlife such as songbirds and hummingbirds.
Here is a sampling of some of those beauties:
Honeysuckle – (Lonicera) There are many forms of the honeysuckle from spreading shrubs to vines. One of the most attractive and commonly used landscape honeysuckles is the Orange Honeysuckle (Lonicera ciliosa). This quick maturing plant blooms from summer until frost and can reach 15-20 feet in height.
Honeysuckle vines prefer at least partial sun to bloom successfully. The vine can be used to make an attractive screen in most places with temperatures similar to US hardiness zones 4-8. It is no surprise that hummingbirds are attracted to sweet smelling nectar of the flowers.
Other widely used species of Lonicera include L. periclymenum (Woodbine), L. japonica (Japanese Honeysuckle) and L. sempervirens (Coral Honeysuckle). These vines grow easily, provide quick cover with their dense foliage, and definitely put on a show with their trumpet shaped flowers. Several are considered invasive species if let into the wild and some have mild poisonous berries. But that should not stop most gardeners from enjoying honeysuckle vines in their gardens.
Morning Glory – Morning glories (Ipomoea) are beautiful flowering annual vines that grow quickly on smaller trellises and arbors. As a result of their prolific blooming (and the help of a few visiting bumblebees) they will attempt to spread by dropping many seeds. Although some people report that the heavenly blue varieties are not as vigorous seeders.
Moonflower – The sweet scented moonflower (Ipomoea) is another vine with a flower similar in shape to the morning glory, not surprising as it is related. However its large white blooms open during the evening hours and remain open until dawn. The flowers are short-lived but worth the effort once you witness their magical opening. Moonflowers are used as annuals in the northern climates and are perennials in the more tropical climate south.
Sweet Peas – The Sweetpea (Latyrus) is a quick growing tender vine with fragrant flowers that come in whites and shades of pinks and violets. It is a short vine growing into a waist or chest high flush of foliage and flowers, perfect for the sides of a garden lattice arch. Like a number of plants, beauty comes with a cost. Unlike the peas we eat, the seeds of the sweet pea are poisonous and should not be eaten.
Flowering vines can transform any structure, from a formal white arbor to a rustic cedar lattice, into a festively decorated wedding background or natural landscape focal point.
Vines to Beautify Your Garden
An example of perennial vines would be wisteria, gold honeysuckle and climbing roses.
Choosing and Using an Arbor
Some flowering climbers like honeysuckle can add a bit of spice and color to the look of your landscaping picture.
How to Grow Ipomoea Vines
Moon Vine annual vines have been charming gardeners for centuries as a staple of cottage and heirloom gardens.
All about Sweet Pea
Sweet Pea (Lathyrus odoratus) is a flowering plant in the family Fabaceae (legumes), native to the eastern Mediterranean region.
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Wedding Arbor Decoration – Wedding Flowers, Plants, and Accessories
You have so many fun choices for all your wedding decorations and that’s also the case for decorating wedding arches. You can use traditional or modern decorations or a mixture of both.
Once you decide on a general theme for your wedding and a color scheme to use the tough part is over. Selecting specific items to fill in the pieces of the puzzle can be a lot of fun. Be creative and open your mind to new ideas. Hopefully we have a few for you at WeddingArbor.org.

First, here’s a suggestion – Plan to save and reuse some of the decorative detail items. You can enjoy them and literally keep a piece of your wedding ceremony alive in your home for many months and years to come. What do we mean? More on that later under wedding plants.
Wedding Decorating Accessories – You’ll want to select a few of the following accessories for decorating your wedding arbor assembly and you have many options of colors, materials, and styles. These include satin ribbons, fabrics, tulle netting, bows, garlands, beading, and even lights.
Small lights can add a sparkle to the setting especially for evening ceremonies or receptions. Helium filled balloons add a real light festive touch, a lot of color and motion, and even some excitement when the occasional one pops.
Wedding Plants – It is common to add live cut flowers and greenery to the latticework to soften the edges. This also helps tie the structure into the landscape if it is an outdoor wedding ceremony.
Place potted plants around the structure to add to the lushness of the setting and the moment. These can be outdoor plants that can be replanted in your landscape afterwards, potted flowering plants that can be given to guests after the reception, or indoor plants that can be taken home and enjoyed. Better yet, plan to use a combination of all three.
You have the option to buy or rent live, neatly trimmed shrubs or topiary plants to place near the wedding arch. Decorate them with some of the same ribbons, tulle material, bows, or flowers to match those used on the archway. Check with local florists or privately-run garden centers about renting plants for the day if you decide to go that way.
Wedding Ceremony Accents – If the wedding ceremony is indoors or a very protected outdoor area, consider using floor standing candelabras. Decorate the uprights with ribbons or garland to match the other components of your setting. Light the candles right before the ceremony to add to the ambiance. Even unlit, the candelabras lend a nice formal touch to the area.
For a real unique and personal touch, consider hanging a stained glass window accent on the structure. For outdoor weddings the affect of sunlight pouring through the vibrant colored glass can be especially beautiful and inspiring. Have a custom piece made and it will become a treasured keepsake and beautiful reminder of your wedding day.
Take a couple minutes and decide on incorporating one or more of these ideas that make the most sense – not only to your wedding budget but also to your likes and lifestyle. You will be spending money on wedding decorations, so why not get the most out of it that you can an make it last.
You can enjoy some of wedding decorations for years and years to come. Some of them might even “grow” on you.
How to Decorate a Church for a Wedding
Churches may also have candelabras that you can use.
Glowing Wedding Decoration Ideas
Fresh greenery and candles create a natural air of romance for wedding ceremonies and receptions. Lined the aisle or walkways with long and low candelabras.
Lights and Weddings
When mini lights are used in the arbor, it gives the appearance of a starry night. Lights add sparkle to the total wedding scene.
Ideas for Unique Wedding Decoration
Outdoor wedding lights make great arbor accents. Nesting them in the arbor’s foliage creates a starry canopy for the bride and groom.
Green Your Wedding: Reuse, Recycle
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Garden Trellises, Arbors, Grape Vines, and Fruits
Well supported trellised vines provide structure, visual interest, and protection in the garden. Structure as in a growing architectural element in the landscape – visual beauty of foliage and fruit colors, forms and textures – and protection in the sense of providing shade and windscreens.
Grape Vines – Many of us grew up with a neighbor or relative who had grape vines in their backyard, the vines often sprawling over a handmade pergola or piping framework.
Who can forget enjoying their annual fall treat of sweet Concord grapes, squeezing the skins, and spitting out the seeds. And sometimes you were lucky enough to witness the making of grape jam and enjoy its sweetness for many months of the year afterward.
Grape vines make good hardy vertical cover for garden arbors and pergolas and the canopy they provide can block the harshest of summer sun rays.
It takes a few years for the grape vines to establish themselves but it is well worth the wait to have many years of foliage and prolific sweet fruits that follow. And if you enjoy wine and are a bit adventurous, there’s nothing like the satisfaction of making your own homemade wine using the literal fruits of your labor.
Variegated Kiwi Vine – The kiwi vine (Actinidia kolomikta) is an attractive deciduous vining plant that is grown for both its foliage and its “kiwi” fruits. The foliage provides interest with its green leaves that change at the tips to whites, pinks, and rose colors as the leaves mature.
Although not as tough and foolproof as a grapevine, you should definitely consider using the kiwi vine in your landscape. It tends to do well in a wide range of climates such as the US hardiness zones 4-9 and possibly even into zone 3 with winter protection.
If you want a fruit from this Actinidia vine you’ll have to get at least one each of male and female plants. Most often several fruit-bearing female plants are used in combination with a single male plant, which is still an attractive vine even without any fruit. The flowers are not all that conspicuous so this plant is really used for its foliage and fruit. It prefers full sun and will produce the showiest leaf variegation in such exposures.
The kiwi vine will spread minimally about 3-4 feet wide and can grow to about 15-20 feet tall. Its twining stems need support and are best used on lattice filled structures.
Blackberries – Blackberries and Raspberries are perennial shrubs that are often staked but they can also be trained to grow on trellises or the side of a garden arbor. Most blackberries have thorns on their stems so their placement on structures where they can come in contact with human skin is not always advisable. But that doesn’t mean to avoid growing them otherwise you’ll miss out on one of the world’s free summer treats.
Thornless blackberries are available and grown well on trellis systems. It may take several years to get berry plants established and of a decent size but the annual fruit production that you will enjoy for many years to come is worth the effort and the wait. ‘Dormanred’ is a popular trailing raspberry variety. ‘Black Satin’ and ‘Hull’ are two thornless blackberry varieties worth trying. Pruning blackberry and raspberry plants requires a bit of knowledge as there is fruiting wood and non-fruiting wood.
Consider using fruiting vines on your garden arbor, pergola, trellis. Grapevines can be trained and pruned to fit all sizes of structures. The berries are best for shorter structures.
Concord Seedless Grapes
The grapes will need to be supported on a trellis, arbor, fence or wall. Grape vines are often considered ornamental with their curling and twisting trunks.
Buying Grape Cuttings
Starting a grape vine with proper planting material is the key to having a great looking young vine that will reach the trellis in no time.
Grape Vine Supports in Your Landscape
Grape vines are wonderful plants to grow in the garden. You can design them into your landscape easily.
Edible Landscaping Plan
The patio is covered with an arbor that has two kiwi vines on it. Grapevines are espaliered on the wall on either side of the house.
Climbing plants and vines in your home garden
Jasmine, kiwi fruit, and passion-fruit. Plant thorny berry fruits to cover a fence. Birds love the fruit too.
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Garden Arbors, Pergolas, and Flowering Vines
Turn any landscape structure into a real focal point by incorporating flowering vines into your plan. Plants including vines and their support system play an architectural role in the landscape, adding height and depth, shade and cooling, interest and beauty.
There are so many different hardy perennial vines to select from for outdoor use and a lot of them can tolerate a wide range of climates. For outdoor settings like arbors and trellises and the occasional very large indoor application, here are some of the most popular flowering vines:
Clematis – Clematis vines are a great choice for home gardens as they are reliable bloomers, the flowers come many different colors, and the plants are readily available. The vines are not very heavy so they can be used with smaller trellises as well as larger arbors. They are often used to soften the appearance of mailboxes and lamp posts.
Clematis will take several years to really get established and fill out. From a cultural perspective, the common tip is that clematis “like their heads in the sun and feet in the shade. Place low growing plants in front of the clematis and add another layer of plant material to your design at the same time.
There are so many varieties available but Clematis ‘Henryi’ is one of the best long lived varieties with 6″ wide white blooms and interesting bronze color in its new growth. Clematis “Jackmanii’ is a long time favorite with violet flowers.
Clematis are fine stemmed perennial vines and pruning depends on the type, one type flowers on the previous season’s growth and the other type flowers on new growth. It is critical to know which type of you have to guide your periodic clematis pruning and maintenance. Follow the pruning instructions that come with your plants.
Wisteria – The wisteria vine (Wisteria) is a great choice for large outdoor pergolas or decks in the landscape. The most common wisteria’s pendant bluish-violet flowers are quite a beautiful sight in late spring.
Since it is a vigorous growing vine the wisteria will cover quickly and provide shade and screening for your garden niche. One thing to keep in mind is that the wisteria spreads via runners and requires a bit extra pruning compared to some other vines. Be vigilant to keep vines planted near buildings from getting into gutters and roofing. The benefits of its quick growing foliage and beautiful flowers more than makes up for the wisteria’s wandering tendencies.
The ever-thickening network of wisteria vine stems provide year round interest and adds a sense of permanence to the garden.
Trumpet Vine – The trumpet vine (Campsis) is another very tough and vigorous vine with striking red or orange-red flowers. Once established it will rebloom year after year without fail adding a gorgeous touch to your landscape. As a bonus bird enthusiasts should note that trumpet vines attract hummingbirds.
In southern climates the trumpet vine is sometimes considered a weedy plant as it has great tendencies to spread so siting your pergola is important if you want to use the trumpet vine. Also, some people are sensitive to the oils in the campsis leaves but it still warrants using due to its beautiful flowers. For a striking and easy-to-grow vine, the trumpet vine is hard to beat.
So there you have it, a brief look at a few of the most common landscape vines. Next time we will look at some other lesser known flowering vines that will beautify your arbor trellis.
Wisteria floribunda Violacea Plena – Japanese wisteria
Probably the most eye-catching version of trumpet creepers is this Chinese one. As a fast growing vine it can soon cover walls, gazebos or fences.
Campsis grandiflora – Chinese trumpet creeper
Probably the most eye-catching version of trumpet creepers is this Chinese one. As a fast growing vine it can soon cover walls, gazebos or fences.
Climbing Plants | Wisteria Vines
Indeed, in the southeastern U.S. this vine is sometimes considered a weed. Birdwatchers take note: trumpet vines draw hummingbirds! Jackman clematis (Clematis x jackmanii)
Small Space Gardening
Vines & Climbers: a trellis or lattice work used as an open fencing makes an ideal spot for a climber or vine such as clematis and trumpet vine.
Vine for a big pergola
Some vines can get really big (like the trumpet vine or wisteria) and the demure ones don’t bloom all season and won’t completely cover a substantial structure.
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Outdoor Wedding Ceremony and Outdoors Wedding Weather
Your wedding day is one of the happiest days of your life. It is critical to at least consider the detail to make sure that it goes according to plan and is memorable for all the right reasons especially for outdoor wedding locations. But even with the best advanced wedding preparations, your plan can be put to the test if Mother Nature decides not to cooperate. Unless you live in a desert climate and are planning an outdoor Las Vegas wedding, chances are there could possibility be a shower in the forecast in most areas of the country.
In some cultures rain on a wedding day is supposed to bring good luck. Lucky or not plan for contingencies or at least consider some for the most critical segments of the day. So what’s a bride-to-be to do? Plan. Here’s a few things to remember and a few tips to consider to help turn a not so dry weather day into a still very enjoyable wedding day.
If your summer wedding happens to fall in a stretch of extra hot weather, a couple details can help everyone cope a little better with the heat. Plan to add umbrellas to outdoor tables to shade your guests from the strong sun. Ask the catering company to have pitchers of ice water with plenty of plastic cups available at all times. Adding some sliced lemons adds a nice touch.
For an outdoor wedding, plan access to a covered pavilion or arrange for a tent rental company to set up enough covered space to accommodate your guests and activities. In most locations it is a good idea to have wedding event tents with sidewalls. White tents with elegant French or cathedral window sidewalls are perfect for outdoor wedding events.
There’s not typically any special outdoor wedding dresses available for brides or bridesmaids so you’ll have to protect the ones you have the best you can. Arrange to have plenty of extra umbrellas at the ready for the wedding party and guests who are not prepared for the rain. It also doesn’t hurt to have some rain coats and towels in the trunk of a few cars for your guests.
While planning your wedding check out where your wedding ceremony or reception are being help to see what overhead cover there is for arriving vehicles and guests.
If you’ve included a decorated wedding arbor in your plans, live plants and flowers will usually be okay with the rain showers. Artificial plants will also survive the moisture but avoid using paper or tissue paper materials in wedding decorations. It is better to use formed ribbon designs and other artificial material that can withstand moisture and wind better than thin paper products in any wedding decorations.

When the weather cooperates there is no place better to enjoy your wedding day than outdoors. If mother nature throws a little rain or extra heat into the mix, you’ll just smile knowing you did your best to prepare and go on to enjoy your big day.
Make sure to let your guests know in the wedding invitation that your ceremony and/or reception will be held outdoors and to wear appropriate attire. Especially if it is going to be a wedding at the beach.
Wedding disasters to avoid
Disaster Scenario: It’s raining on your wedding day. Even in your most demanding bridezilla moment, you can’t fight the weather — but you can plan ahead.
Wedding Tents Rental – A Perfect ‘Plan B’ Option
You are about to embark on the planning and preparation of a wedding and my guess is that it will be a Spring/Summer wedding, and you are thinking about the idea of renting a wedding.
Choosing a wedding tent
It is extremely important for you to rent a good wedding tent. These tents shield you from the extremes of nature.
Spring Wedding Tips
Make sure that you and your wedding party don’t look like a walking flower garden. While spring weather is typically ideal for an outdoor wedding, be prepared for those spring showers.
How to Decorate a Wedding Tent
Decorating a wedding tent is always a matter of combining elements such as shapes, textures and colors in order to create an environment that is visually pleasing and functional.
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Garden Arbor Styles, Types, Materials, and Finishes
There are several different types of garden structures to pick from – arbors, arches, pergolas, gazebos, and trellises. There is some difference but the distinctions between the structure types is often blurred.
Pergolas and gazebos are generally larger structures and trellises are typically flat and require attachment to another structure.
Your choices are many with several classic styles and various modern designs available. And an unlimited number of custom designs are an option too for the wedding planner who likes total control over all the wedding details.
The arbor is often formed with a curved arch at the top but flat or slightly curved tops are also common. Some arbors come with planters built into the base to hold potted plants for temporary installations such as outdoor weddings but can then be used to hold seasonal flowers in permanent settings. If you are planning on reusing the arbor in your garden permanently you can always add on planters afterwards. Your vines or shrubs may be happier with their roots in the ground depending on your climate and watering habits.
There is a wide range of standard sizes to choose from and custom structures can be built to any size. A common size is approximately 4 ft wide x 2 ft deep x 8 ft high – perfect for your wedding or as an entry to a garden path.
You have choice of materials – woods, metals, or plastics. The wooden variations can be made of cedar, redwood, or pressure treated pine. Lower cost untreated wood is an option if the arbor will be used indoors only. The options for metal frameworks includes steel, iron, and copper. In the man-made material category, plastics such as vinyl, PVC, and a blend of PVC and wood are available.
The type of finish available will depend on the material used to build the structure. Latex or oil based paints can be applied to wooden or metal frameworks. Clear coatings or stains are also good for wooden arbors and come in many different tints.
You can match the paint or stains to the building or other landscape features. This is often done if the wedding arbor is destined to be used in the home garden after the outdoor wedding reception. Iron arbors are painted or powder coated to deter rust.
White is the most common color of wedding arches, arbors, gazebos, and other backdrops. Green paint, stain, or coating is more likely to be used for structures destined to be used as permanent garden focal points. Natural finishes are best for cedar, redwood, and copper materials.
All three will weather to attractive, warm colors, with the greenish patina of copper being especially beautiful and timeless. The newer vinyl or weather-resistant PVC materials and combination recycled materials have the pigment built right in. This makes them a good low maintenance option and popular choice for many outdoor wedding planners.
A wide range of arbors are available as easy-to-assemble kits. In just an hour or two with a few tools such as a cordless drill, hammer, screwdriver, tape measure, and level anyone can build a beautiful garden arbor. Many come prefinished and some like the vinyl are very low maintenance.
So you can see that you have a number of choices when planning you wedding site details. It’s difficult to make a bad choice as the basic design of arbors are attractive and any plant material that you add just enhances the beauty. Don’t worry, just have fun picking out what you like.
Getting a Garden Structure
You will find trellises in front and back yards in gardens of all kinds and against walls and buildings to help tame the mass of vines in the garden.
Looking for an Outdoor Structure
Enhance your landscape. You can’t go wrong with pergolas or arbors in your garden.
Arbors and Pergolas
Arbors are often made of rustic work or latticework, which serves as a trellis on which climbers may grow or on which creepers may be trained. “Pergola” is more difficult to define but are typically larger.
Personalizing Your Front Yard
Add the finishing touches to your landscape with some climbing vines and trellis.
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Wedding Arbors – Wedding Pictures to Backyard Garden
Your wedding day is one of the happiest and most important days of your life. How would you like to keep those wonderful memories alive at home every day of the year? Well of course a framed wedding picture capturing the moment of smiling bride and groom standing under their wedding arbor is one way to do it. But here is an even better idea. Plan to keep your wedding arbor and take it home.
Years after all the wedding reception meals have been digested, the table centerpieces have wilted, and the wedding music has faded, a well constructed wedding arbor can live on in your life for many, many years, right in your backyard landscape.

An arbor can be used in many decorative ways and can easily be adapted from a elegant wedding setting into a beautiful landscape focal point. Your repurposed wedding feature will grow and age into a lovely garden friend.
Wooden arbors are the most common material and vinyl material also gaining popularity for their ease of maintenance. Metal options include painted iron, finished steel, or natural copper models. The copper frames age beautifully and add grace to the garden.
Often thought of as only being white, wedding arbors come in other colors as well. And no matter what color or style you choose for the wedding, it can be repainted if necessary in the future to fit right into your home landscape theme. The metal and wood types are best candidates for repainting. Repainting vinyl is not as easy and generally not recommended.
What to do with your decorated wedding arbor after the wedding reception:
Arrange for someone to deliver your treasure from the wedding reception location to your home or other temporary place after the last official wedding day use of the arbor. Once you return from your honeymoon and get settled into your new life of bliss, you’ll have plenty of time to rework it into a backyard garden feature that you envisioned. You already gave some thought about how you were going to use it while planning your wedding and selecting the design options.
Once your "new" garden arbor is home, you have great opportunity to test it out in the yard. You may want to try different locations or orientations to find just the right place. After all, you will be looking at and enjoying this wedding souvenir for many years to come. When the arbor is set in place and the plants grow on, around, or through its slats it will be more difficult to move than it is right now. So take a few different looks at it. Once the best location is picked out for your new garden arbor it will be time to secure it in place and add the other landscape materials and plantings to your new landscape feature. That’s a subject for another day.
When you include a wedding arbor in your planning checklist for your outdoor wedding decoration, you not only beautify your wedding day, but also start planning for the home life that follows.
The Art and Grace of a Garden Arbor
Garden arbors come in many shapes and sizes, with designs as traditional or offbeat as their owners. Plants are encouraged to climb on the latticework.
Garden Gates and Arbors
Garden gates and arbors make splendid entranceways for your backyard landscape. The entrance to the garden area should never be overlooked.
Gazebos, Garden Arbors, and Trellises
Garden Arbors and Trellis – For the Perfect Backyard.
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About Us
Welcome to WeddingArbor.org. Our aim is to provide useful and interesting information about wedding arbors, decorations, and accessories to help you in your wedding planning. And for those who want to extend and enjoy the memories of their wedding day by repurposing a wedding arch to the home garden, you will find information on using garden arbors with vines and plantings.
The information provided on weddingarbor.org is believed to be factually correct. Opinions expressed herein are our own and not those of our advertisers, sponsors, or other sites that we may link to. Likewise, we are not responsible for the information, opinions, and policies provided on other
websites that we refer or point to in our articles or other places on weddingarbor.org.
We hope that you enjoy our website and that you find the information helpful.
Best Wishes,
WeddingArbor.org
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To prevent unauthorized access, maintain data accuracy, and ensure the correct use of information, we have put in place appropriate physical, electronic, and managerial procedures to safeguard and secure the information we collect online.
Our Commitment To Children’s Privacy:
Protecting the privacy of the very young is especially important. For that reason, we never collect or maintain information at our website from those we actually know are under 13, and no part of our website is structured to attract anyone under 13.
Changes To and Availability of Privacy Policy
The privacy policy for weddingarbor.org will always be posted on our website. We reserve the right to make modifications to the policy in the future without prior notice. Changes to the privacy policy may be required to reflect new technologies or site offerings or to enhance visitor information protection.
How To Contact Us
Should you have other questions or concerns about these privacy policies, please send us an email – (please see Contact Us)
Last Updated: Jan-22-2009
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