Lloyd Landwright has been featured in national publications and trusted garden media, sharing insight into planting, composition, and site-sensitive design.
Press
Gardenista
August 2025
→Garden Visit: A Layered Garden Reimagined
Garden Visit: A Pesticide-Free Landscape with ‘Layered Texture’ spotlights Ashley Lloyd of Lloyd Landwright for her painterly planting style and seasonally responsive design approach. Rather than starting from scratch, Ashley was invited in as a horticultural editor — enhancing the garden’s structure with pollinator-friendly perennials, seasonal containers, and subtle refinements that respected the site’s existing layout.
“The best design happens in relationship and collaboration with the land,” she told Gardenista — a guiding philosophy that runs through all of her work.
American Gardener
July | August 2025
→“Chartreuse in the Limelight”
“Chartreuse plants like Rhus typhina ‘Bailtiger’ Tiger Eyes have a way of drawing the eye without overpowering. I often use them to create rhythm or a subtle focal point—especially when set against cooler foliage like burgundy or blue-green,” says Ashley Lloyd of Lloyd Landwright in Westchester, New York. “There’s something painterly about the way they move the eye through a space, offering contrast that’s lively but soft.”
Gardenista
June 2025
→ Rocks and Boulders in the Garden
Featured for insights into the role of stone as a sculptural and functional design element. Ashley Lloyd of Lloyd Landwright’s planting compositions were highlighted for their integration of boulders as anchors—nestled naturally into the landscape to shape space, add contrast, and ground planting with intent.
“I rarely use a single boulder on its own. I’m thinking about how plants move around it, how it interrupts the eye in a pleasing way,” said Lloyd Landwright, a landscape designer known for painterly plantings and thoughtful spatial rhythm.
Real Simple
2025
→“10 Self-Seeding Flowers Gardeners Swear By”
Quoted for expertise on long-season, self-sowing plants that blend structure with softness. Ashley Lloyd shares insight into designing with dependable bloomers like columbines and corydalis—plants that return without fuss, and subtly support the larger design over time.
“Pink Lanterns feature beautiful soft pink ombré flowers, adding a sophisticated whimsy,” says Lloyd. “They’re ideal for placement behind low shrubs or among shorter grasses.”
White corydalis...softens hard edges, performs from May to November, and its semi-evergreen foliage makes it a welcome addition in Lloyd’s gardens.