Show Off Your Outdoor Décor
Sep 29th, 2010 by Kathy
Now that you’ve gone to the trouble of decorating for autumn, it’s time to show off your handiwork; and there’s no better way to do that than to have an outdoor dinner party. That way, you can also demonstrate your fabulous hosting skills, as well as your culinary creativity.
One of the best parts about this get-together will be that you’ll be able to concentrate on the menu, instead of feeling pressured to come up with a clever motif. Because it’s an affair that’s meant to celebrate the season, the theme, as well as the color scheme, will already be established. Truly, with your home and landscape dressed to the hilt in fall’s finery, it will be evident as far as the eye can see.
All you have to do is to enhance your party area with the ideal accents and accessories; and, once again, you won’t have to go to great lengths to find them. You can use many of the things that went into making your outdoor décor, so everything will tie in splendidly. You’ll have lots of fun dreaming up novel arrangements to display, not only on your outdoor dining table or picnic table, but on outdoor accent tables and outdoor buffets as well; and you can even adorn your patio furniture.
Certainly, you’ll have no difficulty getting people into the mood of the occasion. In fact, they’ll be infused with the spirit of merriment the moment that they arrive, especially if your porch, garden structures, trees, and shrubs, are glistening with strings of miniature lights. Besides sparking a festive atmosphere, they’ll highlight some of the beautiful leaves, which would otherwise be virtually invisible at night; and you don’t want to let that happen, as they are the stars of the season.
Unfortunately, though, there are many factors that can dim your enjoyment of the foliage (aside from living in a climate where it doesn’t change much in the fall). For one thing, even if you choose a date that comes before the leaves are supposed to peak in your region, an unexpected cold snap can cause their intense colors to fade earlier than anticipated.
Then, again, the vines and flowers on your garden structures may have leaves that simply don’t change to attractive autumn colors. For example, I have some on my patio that are quite lush during the summer, but just turn a spotty, brownish-yellow, then shrivel up, before they fall. You may also have new arbors, trellises, or pergolas, that don’t have anything growing on them yet.
So, if you have a dearth of leaves in your yard, or if you want to augment the ones that are already there, it’s not a crime to use fakes. You can get them at craft stores, in “branches” or garlands, some of which come already entwined with strings of lights. Put them in centerpieces and wreaths, drape them over door frames and windows, and wind them around garden structures, including gazebos.
Indeed, artificial leaves can make exquisite, even elegant, decorations; and some of them look very authentic, particularly at night, in soft light. Of course, they can also be on the delicate side.
Therefore, you should handle them with care, as it will be quite expensive to replace them every year. After all, they don’t grow on trees.
Yours Outdoors,
Kathy



















