Curated for volume, leaf structure, and depth

Curated for volume, leaf structure, and depth. Big statements, rich green tones, and pots that keep the overall look calm.

Urban Jungle kleurenpalet

Diep groen met warme aardetinten. Gebruik dit palet voor potten, textiel en accessoires.

Jungle Green#1F3A2E
Deep Olive#3B4A2F
Warm Sand#D2C2A6
Terracotta#B56A4D
Charcoal#2C2C2C

The essence of an Urban Jungle

An urban jungle is layered greenery with impact. You build it the way you build an interior: with height, volume, and rhythm. Large leafy plants form the base, complemented by one or two supporting greenery pieces that make the space “fuller” without becoming cluttered. Work with deep green tones, earthy materials, and pots in stone, earth, or matte black. The trick is balance: lots of greenery can feel luxurious—if you keep it curated.

Urban Jungle combinations that always work

Want to quickly create a rich, layered look? These are three combinations that make Urban Jungle work almost automatically.

Large leaves + stone finish is the Urban Jungle base: powerful, luxurious, and instantly complete. Stone keeps things calm, making the greenery appear deeper and giving it more presence. Perfect as an anchor plant in a bright corner or next to a sofa.

Stelitzia Nicolai
Palermo marble gray

Caryota provides that tropical texture layer that makes a jungle interior rich. In charcoal, it feels modern and urban, rather than “wild”. Pair it with wood, leather, or black steel for a mature Urban Jungle vibe.

Ben Dioret Grey

Ben Dioret Grey

€100,95
Caryota Mitis

Caryota Mitis

€76,95

Alocasia brings drama to the form, but sand makes it soft and premium. This is the combination for those who want something exotic without it screaming. Ideal on a side table or as a second layer next to a larger palm/statement plant.

Alocasia Lauterbachiana
Ceramic White

Ceramic White

€62,95

Tips & styling for Urban Jungle

The urban jungle becomes luxury when you work with structure, not with “more”.

  1. Build in layers: high + middle + low (but keep it curated).
  2. Group plants in sets of 2–3, not loose specimens everywhere.
  3. Choose pots that are calm— the jungle is in the foliage , not in the pot.
  4. Repeat one shade (earth/stone/black) for cohesion.
  5. Leave room to move: the jungle can be full, but not “packed”.

Studio PLNT tip:
Start with one “anchor plant” (Strelitzia/Kentia) and build two smaller layers around it. If you do that right, you will have a jungle feel without the chaos.

Curious about other styles?

Browse the various style guides and discover what suits your interior.

Style guides