|
Garden Design - How You Can Learn From Books And From Visiting Gardens
All of us involved in gardening, whether home gardeners or landscape
professionals, ought to have the will and desire to learn continuously
about our amazing occupation. A stroll in the local park, apart from
being a pleasant experience in itself, is an opportunity for gaining
just one more insight, or learning something new. This is even more so
when one visits some great and famous garden, or even while thumbing
through a garden design book. The question is, do you know how to learn
from these experiences?
It is clear to me as a garden designer and contractor that many
homeowners who are anxious for design inspiration, approach the matter
from the wrong starting point. Most commonly, the person relates what
they see directly to their own garden. After thinking "Oh that won't
grow in my backyard", or believing that a particular configuration is
beyond their budget, they switch off and move on in the hope of finding
something more relevant to their situation. The irony is that seeing
things exclusively from your own subjective point of view, cuts you off
from many sources of inspiration, some of which might be right under
your nose!
Let us try to see things for a moment as a designer would. A
professional involved in any branch of design, whether it is gardens,
home interiors, or architecture, distinguishes between two vital but
distinct categories. On the one hand, are the subjective
desires and needs of the customer. Designing a garden that fails to
relate to these, is like cooking a magnificent steak for a vegetarian!
On the other hand though, the designer sees things objectively, by relating everything to the principles of design. Here are some issues that a garden designer would raise.
*Is the size of the flowerbed in correct proportion to the size of the lawn?
*Is the height of the proposed trees in scale with the house?
*Is the leaf shape of a particular bush, in harmony with the leaf texture of the mass of shrubs?
*Would that statue serve as a striking focal point? Would plants with
showy flowers strengthen the statue's role as a focal point or compete
with it?
*Have I created a clear and bold composition?
These are the sort of questions you can ask yourself when looking for
ideas. By mentally distancing yourself from your own garden, you can
afford to relax and start to see the reasons why the water feature has
an abstract form, or why ornamental grasses have been planted around
it. You realize that all the parts that make up the garden seem to
belong; that nothing is random, and that everything has a role and
purpose. The best way to get real inspiration from a great gardening
book or from a fine park, is to understand the principles behind the
fabulous pictures that you see before you.
My name is Jonathan Ya'akobi.
I've been gardening in a professional capacity since 1984.
I am the former head gardener of the Jerusalem Botanical Garden, but
now concentrate on building gardens for private home owners.
I also teach horticulture to students on training courses.
I'd love to help you get the very best from your garden,
so you're welcome to visit me on http://www.dryclimategardening.com
or contact me at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Tags: Landscaping Garden Design landscape professionals home gardeners
|