Gardens

A Magical, Layered Melbourne Garden - With Giant Metallic Mushrooms!

When artist Kate Ballis and photographer Tom Blachford first came across their Ivanhoe East, Melbourne, home, the backyard was an overgrown, unruly English cottage garden with an impressive array of established fruit trees.

The pair decided this was the perfect base to work off, to create their own whimsical version of an English cottage garden, complete with ‘secret rooms’, winding paths, giant metallic mushrooms (!) and arbours leading to the beds of 41 rose bushes.

The result is something you might expect to see in Alice In Wonderland, with surprises around every corner!

Written
by
Bea Taylor

The whimsical garden of artist Kate Ballis and photographer Tom Blachford! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Tom and Kate found the mushrooms on Facebook marketplace, they had been used at the Eastland shopping centre as Christmas decorations. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Tom and Kate in the garden with their son Sylvester. Kate says the only garden task she doesn’t love is picking up the dog poo, ‘for obvious reasons.’ Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

The mushrooms sit in one of the ‘secret rooms’ in the garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Layered planting ensures there’s something blooming every season. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Kate and Tom moved and repositioned the arbours from the front garden t the back themselves. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

The path to the rose garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Tom and Kate have designed planting at the base of each mushroom to give the impression that it too is sprouting from the ground. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Stakes for dahlias to bloom in late summer. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

The deck was designed by FIGR Architects and built by Kostas Constructions. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

The beautiful garden, as seen from the deck. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Tucked away in one of the garden’s ‘secret rooms’ is the cedar hot tub! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

‘The Hunter’ was found on Gumtree. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Queen Anne’s Lace (Ammi majus). Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Bright red poppies make an appearance in the front garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Landscaper Logan Armstrong helped with the front garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

The front garden is layered and wild with grasses, poppies and perennials dominating the planting. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Tom and Kate found the gold gem sculptures on Facebook Marketplace after they’d been used for Christmas decorations. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Kate has added bulbs, seeds and perennials to the ‘low maintenance’ front garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files

Writer
Bea Taylor
12th of December 2022

Kate Ballis and Tom Blachford’s garden in Ivanhoe East, Melbourne, is a place where imagination can run wild.

From the front, layers of thoughtful planting and gold ‘gem’ sculptures (a Facebook Marketplace find) invite a sense of wonder; a feeling that’s heightened in the backyard where ‘secret garden rooms’ reveal a cosy cedar hot tub, giant metallic mushrooms (ex Eastland shopping centre Christmas decorations, also found on Facebook Marketplace) and whimsical, winding paths.

‘We were drawn to the house and garden because of all its established fruit trees,’ explains Kate. ‘We have mulberry, plums, peaches, nectarines, permission, crab apple and quince, which we love – though I think the possums and cockatoos enjoy the fruits more than us.’ 

During the second lockdown last year, she and Tom moved 42 rose bushes and two arbours from the front garden to the back yard, to create a trilogy of arbours leading to a blooming rose garden full of antique varieties.

‘41 of the 42 rose bushes survived, but it nearly broke us doing it without any help,’ says Kate. 

Despite doing most of the work themselves, the couple did enlist the help of landscaper Logan Armstrong for the larger planting and hardscaping of the front garden, whilst Kate applied a delicate sprinkling of bulbs, seeds and perennials – and a touch of whimsy – in what she describes as ‘painting with flowers’. Kate and Tom also reached out to friend and Garden designer Frances Hale from Peachy Green, who generously passed on lots of ‘advice and cheerleading’!

The couple’s thoughtful planting and planning has created a garden for all seasons. In early spring they enjoyed the ‘short but powerful flowering season’ of 300 tulips and ranunculus, and in late spring, the 41 rose bushes were beginning to bloom. Early summer saw their white Japanese wisteria out in full force and the front garden was a meadow of poppies. Currently, the garden has a more summery feel with the long grasses adding beautiful movement. The pair have also planted 40 dahlias ‘ready for a late summer fiesta if the snails don’t get them all first’. Then, come autumn, Shasta daisies and echinacea will take centre stage. 

‘It’s love. It’s my passion,’ Kate says. ‘I even love weeding after the rain! I love the design, the anticipation, the painting with flowers, the pruning and deadheading to generate more growth.’ 

This passion has filtered through to Kate and Tom’s own creative work, as an artist and photographer respectively. Their latest project together, Influorescence, is a series of large scale, ethereal photographs of the flowers from their garden, shot under nine UV lights. 

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