@jubilee2022 I think the best place to start is with the size of the border, soil type and aspect. These colours are so lovely together you could base a small garden on them, you could find plants for every aspect in these colour tones. Problems arise if you want to plant exactly what is in your photos.
Assuming you have checked out suitability Hydrangas and Roses could be a start with some evergreen to give you some leaf. The Hydrangas flowers in photo might get too big for the plant to hold them in a garden setting but there are plenty to choose from.
Roses are difficult to ID but you could try a post on the Rose section. Roses grown for cut flowers have long stems so could again be grown just for cutting? A photo to David Austin Roses could be worth a try if you are looking to purchase. Perhaps a trip to a good Garden Centre concentrating on just these colours might be an idea too.
For a shady border in good retentive soil you could look at Hellebores available in pale and warm pinks, rich dark reds and and soft greens flowers. Ferns such as the evergreen Polystichum setiferum would give a good contrast of leaf. The Marbled leaved hellebores need more sun if that helps.
All just my thoughts and may be not what you want. Hope you can follow it all. I think and then just type!
I have worked as a Gardener for 24 years. My latest garden is a new build garden on heavy clay.
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These colours are so lovely together you could base a small garden on them, you could find plants for every aspect in these colour tones. Problems arise if you want to plant exactly what is in your photos.
Assuming you have checked out suitability Hydrangas and Roses could be a start with some evergreen to give you some leaf. The Hydrangas flowers in photo might get too big for the plant to hold them in a garden setting but there are plenty to choose from.
Roses are difficult to ID but you could try a post on the Rose section. Roses grown for cut flowers have long stems so could again be grown just for cutting?
A photo to David Austin Roses could be worth a try if you are looking to purchase.
Perhaps a trip to a good Garden Centre concentrating on just these colours might be an idea too.
For a shady border in good retentive soil you could look at Hellebores available in pale and warm pinks, rich dark reds and and soft greens flowers. Ferns such as the evergreen Polystichum setiferum would give a good contrast of leaf. The Marbled leaved hellebores need more sun if that helps.
All just my thoughts and may be not what you want. Hope you can follow it all. I think and then just type!