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Hanging Indoor Plants Tips

 7 Tips for Creative Hanging Indoor Plants



Hanging plants provide vertical appeal to indoor spaces. Here are seven creative ways to display plants that love to follow and climb.


1 Select Backward Races


Some plants are destined to go in the way. Perhaps the two most popular hanging plants are pothos and philodendron. Here are the differences between the types. Both produce long stems covered with heart-shaped leaves that hang (or climb). Encourage hanging plants by letting them do their thing. If you want these plants to be bushier, trim the back ends to allow the plant to form more.


Suspend 2 hanging baskets from the ceiling


Lots of plants are sold in hanging baskets, so all you have to do is hang them in your home. Da-da! A drab corner can be turned into greenery with a hanging fern. Open sunny spots may welcome a hanging basket. Use a strong hook from the ceiling to hang your plant. Hang plants in low-traffic areas, and because your plant is tall, the tendrils won't catch them as they walk.


 3 Create "green" curtains using a wall bracket


Hang a plant from a wall bracket over a window to create evergreen curtains and a beautiful view of greenery from inside your home. Light-loving plants thrive in a window, and you'll be rewarded with beautiful green foliage if the plant grows downward. English ivy trails up the side of a pot, forming long tresses of foliage. Hoya (aka wax plant) comes in a variety of leaf types. They are serious trailers that make for shiny green curtains

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4 Use a macrame hanger


You don't need a plant to hang it. Macrame and twine hangers allow you to hang any type of plant, regardless of whether the leaves actually hang downward. Consider all types of plants for this, including stock plants, succulents, cacti, and snake plants. If you can fit the pot on a macrame hanger, you can hang it.


 5 View on a pedestal



Another way to show off the beauty of plants is to place them on a pedestal and allow their foliage to droop. You can find plant pedestals in all sorts of styles: classic Greek columns, Victorian filigree plant stands, and minimalist rustic stools. The arrowhead plant sprouts aerial roots from the stems. See what a beautiful idea it is to raise a plant on a shelf.


Set up 6-foot plantings


Popular in today's modern decor are legged planters that elevate a plant. Even large ground plants will rise on occasion when lifted off the ground. Foot planters are also ideal for raising the profile of a trailing potted plant from a tabletop or living room side table. Choose footed planters to show off the column's beautiful colorful foliage and its swaying stems to swoop and cascade.

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7 Encourage roaming


The tendrils of some hanging plants are long enough to drape them across window sills or porch rails. Philodendron and pothos grow long, leaf-covered stems that spread for yards. Be creative! Train them across the porch rails. Give them a leg up spindles on a staircase. Find more design inspiration using flags.


Best indoor hanging plants


Make crowded shelves and tabletops a thing of the past by hanging houseplants from your ceilings and walls. The following varieties and their trailing stems, drooping leaves, and gracefully curved forms will make the most of your home's vertical spaces.


English ivy


Also known as common ivy, English ivy (Hedera helix) is grown indoors and outdoors in the garden for its lush, glossy foliage. It is one of the best indoor plants for low light, but it thrives perfectly in bright light. It comes in wide varieties that offer different leaf shapes and colors.


A child's tears


This small houseplant gets its name from the small round leaves that line its smooth, trailing stems. The Baby's tears (Pilea depressa) grow quickly and drape over the hanging plant like a living curtain.

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Burrow's tail


Rows of small, plump leaves on layered stems make Burrow's tail (Sedum morganianum) one of the most unique succulents to grow indoors. This low-maintenance and drought-tolerant houseplant is often confined to tabletop gardens, but it truly shines when its rope-like stems hang from a hanging pot.


Spider plant



The gracefully curved, narrow leaves give the spider plant (Chlorophytum comosum) its name. This popular indoor hanging plant adds a lush forest feel to a brightly lit room, thanks to its fountain-like foliage and dangling stems of baby plants that send out from its center.


Arrow flag


The large, heart-shaped leaves of Syngonium podophyllum add a tropical touch to any room. This indoor hanging plant thrives in humidity, so it works well in the bathroom or kitchen – but keep it out of reach of your pets, as it can be toxic when eaten. Arrow flags come in green, pink, and burgundy colors.


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Boston Fern


Boston fern (Nephrolepis exaltata) adds feathery, instant greenery to indoor spaces. Remember that this fern likes moisture, especially in winter, spray it with water daily to keep the leaves from drying out.


Bird's Nest Fern



Enhance contemporary decor by hanging a bird's nest fern (Asplenium nidus) in a window. Its beautiful, curved leaves change shape depending on the amount of light exposure—but keep it out of direct sunlight, which can cause the leaves to shrivel and turn yellow.


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