
Many of us here at Apartment Therapy are tending to less-than-palatial outdoor spaces. Often it's a window box or plant-filled balcony that makes up our apartments' "gardens". But even your choices in container gardens can be influenced by the French or the English garden...

formal French garden at Villandry. Image: Flickr member caspermoller licensed under Creative Commons
French gardens are formal. They're often symmetrical and plantings are trimmed in tidy geometries. Think green box hedges. Your small container garden equivalent might be like the linear wheatgrass or spherical topiaries pictured up top.

English garden in Hertfordshire. Image: Flickr member jimbowen0306 licensed under Creative Commons
The English garden is made to look much more like a natural landscape. It might even have an overgrown, untamed appearance. Think multi-color wildflowers. Your small container garden equivalent might be like the wildflower window box or fern-and-moss terrarium pictured up top.
top image: clockwise: Container Topiary, My Secret Garden, Eddie Ross, and Cottage Living
Although a cute idea, I think this is a false dichotomy. What about Islamic or Asian garden style? They are very different from either French of English, and great historical styles.
view tenderleaf's profile
If I had a house, I'd probably do French in front, English in back.
view Lisa (Montreal)'s profile
Mine is in the Mexican garden style: Terracotta planters, succulents, bougainvilleas..
view Jose A's profile
My mother has a very English style front yard with flowers and decorative bushes but does square foot gardens (very french style) in her backyard with veggies and more flowers. LOVE her garden.
I'm not sure which style I fit into. Which one is for 'I water the peace lilly in my bathroom when it gets droopy'
view Rolen the Great's profile
I like the carefree, freeform style of gardening. In my case, whatever doesn't die on me and stays around. ;)
view junklover's profile
French style, as I understand it, involves extreme restraint.
English style tends to exuberance and a so-called "natural look."
French style is more difficult but incredibly beautiful when it comes off.
view monarda's profile
Monet's garden at Giverny is the exception to French restraint.
http://artandtea.vox.com/library/post/may-in-giverny.html
view lella's profile
Lisa (Montreal)- Your ideal garden sounds like a mullet! Business up front, party in the back.
view StudioStarter's profile
LOL at the mullet house idea. The difference is, I would never date a man with a mullet, but I might date a man with a mullet house.
I definitely go for the English style. Even when I buy asian plants and/or succulents, they manage to look very english. Probably because I use tea boxes as planters quite often.
I agree though, Asian gardens should certainly be included- they are crisp without being contrived like French gardens. Islamic gardens are pretty interesting, though I doubt it is as recognizable as other styles. Mexican and tropical seem to me to be similar to english in the more natural and untamed sense.
view Nolann's profile
I crave symmetry, which I guess is a little more French formal perhaps?, but I love the wildness of the plantings in an English garden. Still trying to figure out how to impose more structure, on this garden, plus grow enough small scale trees that bush out over the fence so I can have more of a "secret" garden... I crave privacy and live in the crowded city! I want to sleep in a hammock, on a lazy Summer afternoon, without being observed by anyone but the birds.
view Rucy's profile
Japanese.
With some natural woodland influences and, in some corners, maye a TOUCH of English...
view SherryBinNH's profile
hahaha. I love the idea of a mullet garden!
view mechelle's profile
mine is california style.
view Jesse Lu's profile
jaja!!!! mine is almost mexican with californian terra cotta and plastic pots, bougainvillea, but also ferns,vines and flowers....no Cactus cause I live in Arizona and thats the least I want to see in my balcony garden...
view ilovenature4ever's profile