Our 2026 Garden Plant Picks: Evergreen Structure, Color, and Standout Specimens

Every year, we’re looking for plants that don’t just fill space in the garden…
they create structure, add contrast, and give us something to look at in every single season.

And for 2026, we found some of our favorite selections yet.

We recently visited Iseli Nursery for the best evergreen and tree selections for our Zone 6A garden this year—and these are the ones we’re most excited about.

If you’re thinking about adding structure, color, or a true statement piece to your own garden, these are worth a look.

A Small Tree That Actually Earns Its Spot: Cinnamon Curls Birch

We’re always careful about adding trees. In a smaller garden, they need to work hard.

This birch checks all the boxes:

  • Compact size (around 15 ft tall)
  • Bright white bark at a young age
  • Unique peeling cinnamon-colored texture
  • Resistant to common birch pests


What really sold us? You don’t have to wait decades for that signature bark. It shows up early, which makes it feel like a true focal point much sooner.

Japanese Maples That Add Light and Movement

Alpen Glow Japanese Maple

This one is all about light.

The leaves are thinner, so when sunlight hits them, they almost glow. That effect alone can completely change how a garden feels, especially in morning or evening light.

  • Approx. 15 ft tall
  • Strong red spring color
  • Beautiful fall color
  • Adds movement and softness

Mikawa Yatsubusa (Perfect for Containers or Small Spaces)

This is one of those plants that people always ask about.

The leaves stack tightly on top of each other, creating a dense, almost sculptural look.

  • Great for containers
  • Slow growing
  • Unique texture you won’t find elsewhere


If you’re short on space but still want something special, this is a great option.

Evergreen Structure (The Backbone of the Garden)

If you’ve followed us for a while, you know this already:

👉 Evergreens are what make a garden look good even when everything else disappears.

These are some of our favorite additions this year.

Moonstone Blue Spruce (Compact and Consistent Color)

We love a plant that doesn’t surprise us in a bad way.

  • Stays compact (about 2–3 ft wide)
  • Keeps its blue color year-round
  • Naturally maintains a globe shape


This is perfect for layering near shrubs or anchoring a vignette.

Jubilee Weeping Alaskan Cedar (Height + Movement)

This one is doing a very specific job in our garden:

Creating height without bulk.

  • Tall and narrow
  • Graceful, flowing movement
  • Faster growing than most evergreens


We’re planting these in a trio to create a soft screen that still feels open and natural.

Green Wave Atlas Cedar (Layering and Texture)

This is a completely different shape—and that’s exactly why we love it.

  • Low, spreading habit
  • Adds layers to the garden
  • Soft blue-green color


It breaks up all the vertical elements and adds depth to the design.

Texture + Color: The Details That Make a Garden Feel Finished

This one is all about texture.

The crested, swirling growth pattern gives it a really unique look—and the golden color adds brightness where you need it.

Curly Tops Sawara Cypress

Soft. Curly. Blue.

This is the kind of plant that makes people stop and ask, “What is that?”

Heatherbun Atlantic White Cedar (Winter Interest Surprise)

This one looks soft and subtle most of the year…

And then in winter, it turns a deep plum color.

That kind of seasonal shift is what keeps a garden interesting long after summer is over.

A Simple Pattern You Can Use in Your Own Garden

If you’re trying to figure out how to actually use plants like this, here’s the pattern we’re following:

  • 1 standout tree (like the birch or Japanese maple)
  • 2–3 structural evergreens for backbone
  • 1–2 texture plants for contrast
  • something unexpected (color, shape, or seasonal change)


That combination is what creates a garden that feels intentional instead of random.

Final Thoughts: Building a Garden That Works Year-Round

One of the biggest shifts we’ve made in our own garden over the years is this:

We don’t just plant for spring and summer anymore.

We plant for:

  • winter structure
  • fall color
  • texture in every season


And these 2026 selections are a reflection of that.

They’re not just pretty plants.
They’re plants that do something in the garden.

🌿 Want Help Designing Your Garden?

If you’re trying to figure out what works together (and what doesn’t), this is exactly what we focus on inside our free guides. Grab them below!

👉 Eric + Christopher’s Garden Favorites Guide
👉 Eric + Christopher’s Garden Pairing Guide

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