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For a garden to "work," it's got to have more than just complementary flower colors and interesting foliage for when plants aren't in bloom. Just as important is vertical interest, some feature or features that draw your eye up, causing you to scan and process the whole of the garden as a tapestry. Look at any of the really great British gardens, for example, and one of the common features you'll notice are huge, tall, brick or stone walls rising 8-, 10-, even 12 ft., or more. Well, that's hard to duplicate in this country these days, especially without a significant family fortune, but fences, arbors, trellises, and obelisks are all effective and affordable means of drawing the eye up and giving the garden a third dimension---height.
New gardens, especially, are in need of structures to provide this vertical element. Flowering trees, dwarf conifers, and large shrubs can all be used to provide natural vertical interest over the long term, but for the first few years there's simply no substitute for man-made structure. So what should you choose? Well, it depends on what you're trying to accomplish, the style of your house, and the kind of gardens you like. Let's talk first about what you're trying to accomplish.