Something fine textured to soften the edges. Grasses/Sedges and a creeping groundcover like Thyme, Sedum or Phlox. Answer from charlesbronson05 on reddit.com
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MyGardenLife
mygardenlife.com › plant library › what to grow › 10 beautiful edging plants for a lawn, walkway, or garden border
10 Beautiful Edging Plants for a Lawn, Walkway, or Garden Border - MyGardenLife
July 15, 2024 - Small-leaved boxwood is a slow-growing evergreen shrub. With its dense, compact growth, boxwood can be shaped into hedges and is a popular choice alongside paths and walls. For edging next to garden beds or walkways, choose dwarf varieties that ...
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Arka Energy
arkaenergy.com › learn › walkway-plants
25 Stunning Walkway Plants for Your Beautiful Garden 2025
A dense, moss-like ground cover forms a rich green carpet along shaded walkways. Watering is required regularly for maximum turf grass growth, and it produces tiny white flowers in late spring. Delicate blue blossoms brighten footpaths. A versatile ground cover that thrives in both sun and afternoon shade, making it ideal for edging and borders. A colorful ground cover with small, spherical leaves and yellow flowers or perennials. Drought-tolerant and low-maintenance plant that forms a dense carpet along garden walkways.
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Bob Vila
bobvila.com › lawn & garden › 20 plants to use as lawn and garden borders
The 20 Best Border Plants for Your Lawn and Garden - Bob Vila
January 16, 2024 - This and other compact boxwoods make a fantastic border plant for formal gardens. ... Line your sunny garden path or walkway border with French, Spanish, English, or hybrid lavender for a real treat.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/gardening › tips for new homeowner looking to jazz up walkway to front door? very minimal gardening skills (new to this), but wanting to learn. thanks!
r/gardening on Reddit: Tips for new homeowner looking to jazz up walkway to front door? Very minimal gardening skills (new to this), but wanting to learn. Thanks!
June 21, 2023 - They wound up putting a border about 18" on each side, then put down wood chips and put sturdy decorative pots out and planted very easy to grow annuals in the pots. Once they get the hang of gardening they intend to do mixed flowers along the walkway directly in the ground around the pots.
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Pinterest
pinterest.com › explore › home decor
Pinterest
January 5, 2023 - Garden and plants · 364 Pins · ·4 sections · 2mo · Front Walkway Flower Bed Ideas · Plants For Front Walkway · Garden Paths And Walkways Flower Beds · Landscaping Front Walkway · Narrow Pathway Landscaping · Plants For Garden Path Edges · Plants For Lining Walkways ·
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The Spruce
thespruce.com › edging-plants-explanation-examples-2131043
Tips for Choosing Edging Plants for Your Garden
April 22, 2024 - Moss rose plants are flowering annuals commonly used in container gardens, along the front edge of garden bed borders, and as edging along paved walkways. As a groundcover, they don't spread fast outside bounds, so they're ideal for small gardens.
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Martha Stewart
marthastewart.com › 8275789 › best-flowers-border-garden
11 Border Flowers to Plant Alongside Your Garden Paths, Walkway, or Driveway
June 7, 2024 - "It offers maximum satisfaction in a small-scale package.” ... Ideal as a sprawling border over the edge of a path or walkway, drift roses provide season long color. "Drift Roses are a beautiful blend of ground cover roses and miniature roses that stay low and are a complement to other plant pairings around them," says Heidi Mortenson, rose portfolio manager and bloomables brand manager for Star Roses and Plants.
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Veranda
veranda.com › gardens › beautiful garden & landscaping ideas › 27 border plants for the prettiest garden walkways and flower beds
27 Best Border Plants for Pretty Garden Paths and Beds in 2025
May 7, 2025 - This ornamental herb, which boasts pretty purple flowers, makes for a fragrant ground cover ideal for lining steps or between pavers on patios or terraces. When crushed, the flowers emit a fresh herbal scent. Plant this deer-resistant ground cover in full sun to partial shade. ... The long-lived hosta is another classic choice for a garden path. Here, grass-joined bluestone pavers are edged with variegated hostas for a soft and organic border along the walkway to a poolside dining terrace (Janice Parker Landscape Architects, with Darren Henault).
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AOL
aol.com › 23-plants-captivating-walkway-borders-211300533.html
These Border Plants Will Totally Elevate Your Garden Game
May 7, 2025 - This ornamental herb, which boasts pretty purple flowers, makes for a fragrant ground cover ideal for lining steps or between pavers on patios or terraces. When crushed, the flowers emit a fresh herbal scent. Plant this deer-resistant ground cover in full sun to partial shade. ... The long-lived hosta is another classic choice for a garden path. Here, grass-joined bluestone pavers are edged with variegated hostas for a soft and organic border along the walkway to a poolside dining terrace (Janice Parker Landscape Architects, with Darren Henault).
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Savvy Gardening
savvygardening.com › home › low-maintenance garden border ideas: what to plant along a garden edge
Low-Maintenance Garden Border Ideas: Plant Ideas
March 11, 2023 - I have some sedums planted close to a curb and delosperma at the edge of a garden path, and sweet woodruff in a shady border. There are also low, mounding perennials that can create a stellar border.
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Depends how big the whole area of the yard is whether you stick to one plant only or not - I wouldn't, I'd use probably 3 different plants planted in groups of at least 3 or more, depending on the ultimate size of the plants chosen. It won't be easy to achieve the layered effect you want with planting because the border looks to be quite narrow, and particularly narrow in the middle part, where the paving curves. It's probably best to stick to group planting along the area.

The Rhoeo spathacea 'tricolor' in the photo (your Moses in the Cradle) should work there, though it does colour better with some sun - I suspect it would go quite plain green in full shade. Liriope is definitely one to consider - common name Lily turf - there are variegated leaf versions available such as L. muscari 'variegata' or L. 'Silvery Sunproof', and it produces short stems with lilac flowers.

Chlorophytum cormosum (Spider plant) would be good, but it doesn't like to dry out all the time, so that might mean it's not a good choice if you can't keep it watered as necessary.

Brachyglottis 'Sunshine' might work (sometimes still called Senecio greyi or Brachyglottis greyi) - I'm just not sure whether it would cope with the temperatures in Zone 10b - it does grow in other parts of California up to Zone 9b, so might be worth risking. If you risk planting this one, it gets taller than any of the others I'm mentioning here, with a similar spread (can be clipped or shaped once or twice a year to make it rounded if you want), so care should be taken when positioning it. Responds very well to trimming, shaping and hard pruning. Its grey foliage would make a good backdrop for that purple leaved Phormium or Cordyline I can just see the edge of, bottom right in the photograph...

UPDATED ANSWER:

In light of the new set of photographs you've posted, and your suggested plantings, I hate to be the bearer of bad tidings, but I doubt any of these will work. The area is shady - bougainvillea, for instance, needs a minimum of 5 hours direct sunlight to flower successfully, and it needs a framework to climb or be tied to, so I'm wondering what you were thinking of supplying for that. Second, the ivy next door is a big problem - in Photo A, you show a new bed outlined in red where you're thinking of planting Hibiscus of some variety and the Bougainvillea - if you open up the ground there and plant into it, the ivy will spread into that in a heartbeat - its likely the roots are already encroaching under the 'grass' or lawn or whatever it is that's already there. Planting anything in that area will not 'keep back' any growth from next door, its topgrowth will continue its inexorable invasion unless it meets a solid object, when it'll climb up it (if its actually Ivy).

Equally, Cannas prefer full sun, or about 5/6 hours in hotter climates, and won't do at all well in no sun conditions, plus I doubt there's much root room to add anything at the base of the King Palm shown in Pic C, you'd need to try to dig around a bit, gently, to see how much 'free' soil there is available - there may be hardly any, which means you can only put very small plants in there.

Really, the only way forward is to look at shade planting exclusively - the roses need to come out, they'll never do any good with such low light levels. Nearer the front of the property, there is certainly more ambient light, but you have said there isn't really any direct sunlight even there for any length of time, which means that choosing shade lovers is probably the best way forward. One other option to consider is removing the King Palms IF that means some sun will reach the area - by doing that, you change the conditions and can then consider other plants. It does, though, seem almost criminal to remove them - I can't see the tops so don't know how attractive and healthy the foliage is, but the trunks in themselves are things of beauty. Note that your King palms like neutral to acid soil conditions, so you can assume that's what your soil's like there if they're growing healthily.

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Ornamental peppers would look pretty good there, I think, and they should be perennials in your zone. They would require more water and care than many options, but you could get fruit, too. Chinese 5 Color, Medusa and Black Pearl are a few example varieties of ornamentals. Not all ornamental peppers are said to taste great, but some of them (including Chinese 5 Color) should taste fine.

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Garden Style San Antonio
gardenstylesanantonio.com › home › garden articles › beautiful border plants
Beautiful Border Plants - Garden Style San Antonio
June 28, 2022 - With tiny leaves and pink flowers, this mounding skullcap makes a great border plant. Wright’s skullcap. This evergreen Central Texas native offers purple blooms in spring to lure in pollinators. Bulbine. Perfect for sunny areas, the small orange and yellow blossoms rise over a bunched base.
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Pinterest
pinterest.com › slivingplants › borders-walkway-plants
Borders & Walkway Plants
Discover 54 Borders & Walkway Plants and Southern Living Plants Ideas | wisteria amethyst falls, agapanthus plant, blue point juniper and more · Skip to content · Search for easy dinners, fashion, etc · When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to select.
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Proven Winners
provenwinners.com › learn › finding-right-plant › plants-tight-spaces
Plants for Tight Spaces: Smart Picks for Small Areas
Discover skinny plants, short shrubs, edging options, and heat-tolerant choices—perfect plants for narrow beds, walkways, crevices, and tight garden spaces.
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Better Homes & Gardens
bhg.com › gardening › design › styles › best-plants-for-landscape-edging
The 19 Best Edging Plants for Your Flower Beds
June 9, 2015 - ... Boxwood is a classic choice for elegant, evergreen edging. Opt for dwarf varieties like 'Morris Midget' and 'Wee Willie' to achieve a neat, compact hedge for your garden borders.
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Dave's Garden
davesgarden.com › community › forums › t › 1308674
Perennials:My Front Walkway Garden
Dying daffodil foliage is always a problem -- and yet I plant more and more of them. ... What about Veronicas? Sunny Border Blue would echo the Platycodons, Red Fox is a nice deep pink but shorter, could be interesting with the Heuchera, Icicle is White, incana Pure Silver could be interesting ...
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Pinterest
pinterest.com › explore › lawn and garden › garden design › garden pathway › plants next to walkway
Plants Next to Walkway
Timber Walkways Ideas: From rustic designs to modern aesthetics, explore diverse walkway inspirations. ... A sleek wooden walkway flanked by neatly trimmed greenery creates a modern and symmetrical aesthetic. Materials and Finish: Straight, evenly spaced wooden planks are stained to retain their natural grain. Black gravel fills the spaces between the planks for contrast. Surroundings: Carefully curated plants, including white flowers and grasses, provide a fresh, minimalist vibe.