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Garden Design



Garden Design Tips


The following garden design tips will help you when planning a new garden bed or if you're looking for ways to make existing plantings look even better. And remember, the trend today is not to segregate perennials in their own flowerbed, but to plant a "mixed border."

1. Designing a garden is different from designing a landscape. A landscape is a whole courtyard and focuses on curb appeal and permanence. It covers the shade trees, gardens and foundation plantings of evergreen shrubs.

2. As a landscape designer, I know that there are important factors that can enter into a well-designed garden. A garden will change for all households in accordance with the needs and desires of homeowners and site conditions in the property. A thoughtful design is fundamental to the best value for the owner.

3.When in the planning stages, it is important to think everything through thoroughly. In general, the original plan does not even include the selection of plants, but only the sizes and textures of what is desired. We have to decide if they want a symmetrical or asymmetrical design, especially for two beds to mimic each other.

4. In the flower garden, more is definitely more. This mass of flowers you see in a good garden is composed of groups provided that the drift of three, five, seven or more of the same plant.

5. A garden full of one of this and one of that tends to look jumbled. Most experts recommend planting all except some of the largest stand-alone plants in odd-numbered groupings or three or more.

6.The plants from as far afield as the maximum length of each plant. For example, a perennial that grows to 24 inches wide should be 20 to 24 inches from its neighbors.

7. There are many ways to do this. Try to limit the colors that harmonize well, or put some plants in groups of three and repeat between individual examples of other plants. You can also throw things together with an important backdrop as an evergreen hedge, or using one type of plant as an edger along the front of the bed.

8. Symmetry is a formal approach to landscaping - for example, vertical planting shrubs same on both sides of the door. But this may be asymmetrically, for example, three boxwoods with mounds of the side of a road can balance the visual weight of a tall evergreen, upright on the other side.

9. The designs include accents attractive flower garden that immediately attracts attention. A bank, a newspaper stand, a door, art or sculpture of the focal points can be good all. Large gardens can accommodate more than one focal point. In a small garden, doing something special to celebrate the entrance - a door through a roundabout is an old classic.

10. The final part of the design is the plant material. Basically everything that leads to this point. All the preliminary work described will do well where. Having a good knowledge of what is available is very useful at this point in the design. If the shape and size of the plants have already been decided, makes this phase easier. If necessary, consult a professional for help as to what that thrive in your area. Here is where it really comes together and makes it exciting.