How to Make Ivy Topiaries

mla104109_1209_topiary_mantle.jpg

Gardening expert Andrew Beckman shows how to fashion an ivy topiary.

What You'll Need

It's best to use hanging-basket plants that have long stems.

  • One 6- or 8-inch hanging basket of ivy
  • 4 pots with drainage holes (accommodating the height and width of topiary form)
  • Soil
  • 4 topiary forms
  • Garden pruners
01 of 05

Steps 1 and 2

mla104109_1209_topiary_ht1.jpg

Step 1

Remove the plant from its pot. With your hands, split it in half gently, then split each half in two; each quarter will make 1 topiary.

Step 2

Plant 1 quarter in the new pot, tamping the soil firmly around the roots.

02 of 05

Steps 3-5.

mla104109_1209_topiary_ht2.jpg

Step 3

Gather ivy stems, and carefully feed them through the topiary form; for flat forms like the circle, this step isn't necessary.

Step 4

Push the stakes as far as possible into soil.

Step 5

Divide stems according to the form. (Andrew made 4 groups, 1 for each obelisk leg. For flat forms, make 2 groups.)

03 of 05

Step 6

mla104109_1209_topiary_ht3.jpg

Beginning with the longest stem in each group, wrap it gently, clockwise, around an upright wire on form. If stem is longer than wire, train the rest down the opposite wire.

04 of 05

Step 7

mla104109_1209_topiary_ht4.jpg

Wrap next stem counterclockwise. Repeat, alternating between clockwise and counterclockwise, until stems are used up. If part of form is full, wind remaining stems around less-full wires.

05 of 05

Steps 8-10.

mla104109_1209_topiary_ht5.jpg

Step 8

For a neat look, trim any side shoots that are too small to train.

Step 9

Repeat to make 3 more topiaries.

Step 10

Water thoroughly, and place in bright, indirect light. As topiaries grow, train stems onto form or prune off excess growth.

Was this page helpful?

Related Articles