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Design Concepts

There is a bewildering array of plants, building materials and stones to pick from when designing a garden. It is important to bring these details together in a harmonious manner.  Successful coordination creates a garden that is pleasing to the eye and  appears natural, balanced, and comfortable. Coordination also helps camouflage the negative while accentuating the positive features. The details to coordinate are color scheme, line, form, volume, texture, and transition. To create transitions it is important to coordinate color schemes, lines, and textures.

 

WaterWise1

 

Color Scheme

Create a color scheme by first examining what already exists on your property (house, fence, trees, hedges, hardscape, etc.). Next, consider your color preferences and organize a color palette that works for you and your property.

Helpful hints:

 

Choose a shade of green for the hedges. This will be a primary color as hedges are the “bones” of the garden. Does a soft gray-green shade, or a medium forest green, or pale spring green, or a shiny fresh green appeal to you?

 

hedges

Include complementary, neutral colors if your preference leans toward strong, vibrant color combinations.

 

Use a color wheel.

 

IMG00014                Color Wheel

Color Wheel                                Color wheel in action.

 

Color Wheel

The outer edge of a color wheel shows the primary colors (red, yellow, and blue) along with their secondary colors (orange, green, and violet).  The middle circle shows pale tints of the primary and secondary colors as a result of mixing them with white. The inner circle shows shades made by mixing black with the primary and secondary colors.

 

Warm or Cool

Warm colors (red, orange, and yellow) are considered energizing.  If you want to tone down these colors, place them in filtered light or against a dark background. Be spare with these colors because too much may appear overwhelming and tire the eye.

 

Cool colors (green, blue, and violet) recede and calm. To brighten (highlight) cool colors, combine with white. This is useful for bringing attention to a shaded area. Cool colors disappear in shade and moonlight. White and pastels are washed out in sunlight.

 

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Design: Suzanne Biagi, Sculptural Landscapes

This cool color palette is highlighted with three smooth, pale stones.

 

Near or Far

Warm colors (and white) make items seem closer and appear larger. Warm colors planted at the foundation line will make your home appear closer to the street.

 

Warm Colors

Warm colors brighten the garden.

 

Cool colors (and black) make items recede and appear smaller. Cool colors planted at the foundation line will make your home appear farther from the street.

 

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Design: Suzanne Biagi, Sculptural Landscapes

The fountains cool gray colors blend with the background.

 

Color Schemes:  Complementary, Analogous, Monochromatic, and Triadic.

 

A complementary color scheme combines a color with its opposite. A color wheel may be useful for this type of color scheme.  Examples of complementary color displays include:  green plants next to a red house, fiery fall color with a blue-sky backdrop, or a rustic bench with yellow striped pillows against a purple garage wall.

 

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Complementary colors

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Bold and bright complementary

colors

 

 

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An analogous (or adjacent) color scheme combines adjacent colors on the color wheel.

 

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Adjacent color wheel

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Design: Michelle Derviss, Landscapes Designed

Powerful shades of rust and orange spice this

garden

 

A monochromatic scheme combines various shades and tints from just one color family. Examples of a monochromatic scheme include moss and gray green grasses against a gray stone fountain.

 

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Monochromatic color wheel

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Design: Exteriors Landscape Architecture

Blue hues.

 

 

A triadic scheme (split-complementary) occurs when three colors equidistant on the color wheel are combined. Some examples of this combination are using red with yellow and blue, or red-orange with yellow-green and blue-violet.

 

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Triadic color wheel

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Garden is rich with split-complementary colors.

 

 

Color and Rhythm

Repeating the color schemes creates a rhythm that will move the eye through, around, and/or beyond the landscape. For example: alternate rose-pink windowsills and purple flowers with green shrubbery.  

 

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       Pink, rose, and green colors repeat along the wall and shrub border.

 

Seasonal Color

Annual plants are considered accent plants because they bring lots of color to an area.  However, they bloom only once and then will need to be replaced seasonally. Planting annuals is labor intensive and they are not considered water wise.

 

       Rich Colors

California Poppies are technically an annual flower, but under the right conditions, they will grow for several seasons, and they also reseed freely.  They are water wise and need a soil that has good drainage.

 

Fall color plants (deciduous) are sound investments. Color change can start in early summer and last through spring.  However, fall color usually means leaf drop, so design with maintenance in mind.

 

Bench and Yellow

Fall color as a patio focal point.

 

Line

Choosing plants that reflect, or echo, existing lines (natural and architectural) on the property will help unify the garden.

 

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Plants border the elegant curved line of the stone seat wall.

 

For example: many one level, contemporary homes are styled with horizontal lines, so the garden should mimic the flow of those lines to create harmony.

 

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Stone retaining walls fitted into the hillside integrate the

structure and site.

 

Besides horizontal and vertical lines, keep in mind the major shapes that occur on your site and try to mimic them with plants.

 

Strive for an unbroken landscape line with these rules of thumb:

 

Find out how high and wide the plant will be at maturity before purchasing. Plant height, width, and mass should be in proportion to the home and appropriately sized for the planting location. For example a 60 foot tree with a 40 foot spread will dwarf a single-story ranch style home. On the other hand in warm climes it may provide invaluable shade during the hot summer months.

 

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The mature Oak tree is out of scale with the residential site.

 

Canopy (overhead spreading branches) plants soften building edges and provide shade.

 

Create a focal point (terminus) in the garden to provide a visually satisfying resting point. This can be accomplished with either straight or curved lines, or both. An example of a focal point would be a bench at the end of the path. To draw the eye to the bench, the view of the bench is framed by three planes: an overhead plane represented by the sky or overhanging trees, a vertical plane by the trellis or a hedge or wall, and a base plane by a path, paving, lawn, or groundcovers.

 

focalpoint

 

To complement a stately, symmetrical home, use straight (axial) lines to reinforce the style.  To further the formal effect, be sure to create a visually balanced pathway in which each side is a mirror image of the other.

 

Chula Vista 003

 

 

An informal, asymmetrical home may use curved lines to create a flowing, relaxed garden. Curved lines are stronger when curved toward each other than when curved outward.  A design is asymmetrically “balanced” when opposite shapes on either side of the focal point equally draw your attention. For example: a tree and a shrub, although opposites, create a balanced appearance.

 

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Design: Exteriors Landscape Architecture

This house is considered asymmetrical because the front

door is not centered. The steps and low garden wall

casually lead to the entry.

 

Lines should be flowing and graceful and form either a definitive shape or end at a focal point. Avoid lines that are too wavy or "uncertain" or that lead to nowhere.

 

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Avoid a static line with little or no change. The eye moves easily from one section of the garden to another using lines of continuity. A blank wall, a pathway that ends abruptly, or a formal garden with no focal point will result in a feeling of confusion or discord.

 

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The endpoint of this path is uncertain

because it disappears into the shadow.

 

Form

Make note of the dominant shapes (structures, trees, shrubs, hardscapes, etc.) on your property. Choose plants that complement or mimic these forms.

 

Suggestions on form and design:

 

Command attention to an entry with an upright plant.

 

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Dramatically announce the entry.

 

A classic, oval shape can be tranquil, dramatic, or both.

 

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The oval-shaped patio creates an inviting oasis.

 

A columnar shape is essential for a formal garden, as it creates living walls and boundaries (garden rooms).

 

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Design: Pedersen Associates Landscape Architects

The columns of the pergola create the illusion of a

Garden room.

 

Fanning leaves on a plant can soften a building edge; however, they also may obscure the view as the plant matures. Consult the Plant List or other sources for dimensions of mature plants.

 

Fanning Leaves

The fanning leaves soften the sharp edges of the

building.

 

Volume

When designing and drawing a garden plan, don't forget about "volume."  Plants are three-dimensional and take up a lot of space. A two-dimensional drawing may appear more spacious than the garden actually is.

 

Rules of thumb for volume:

 

To avoid overcrowding plants in the garden, be sure to represent the mature size and shape of plants in the drawing plan.

 

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Overcrowded plants obscure the front

of the house.

 

Hardscapes will make a garden appear large and spacious. Be generous with the dimensions of a concrete path, a brick walk, or a stone patio. Even a small garden will appear spacious if it has paths that are five feet or more in width. Once constructed, the ample paths will provide safety, stability, and a frame for your garden.

 

Texture

Texture can be coarse, medium, fine, smooth, rough, glossy, or dull. As with the other details, dominant or favorite textures should be used as a guideline in the design in order to unify the garden with the house and the rest of the property.

 

               Fine Textured

               The fine-textured plants soften the sides of the path.

 

Texture can be coarse, medium, fine, smooth, rough, glossy, or dull. As with the other details, dominant or favorite texture should be used as a guideline in the design in order to unify the garden with the house and rest of the property.

 

Using texture in your garden:

 

Planted with fragrant chamomile.  (Note that Chamomile reaches 6 inches in height, requires irrigation, and must be cut back frequently.)

 

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Planted with fragrant chamomile.

 

Weathered brick and Arizona flagstone have a medium rough texture that is very complementary to brick, wood, and plants with small to medium-sized, dull leaves.

 

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Design: Exteriors Landscape Architecture

Montana flagstone.

 

Tile, such as cut slate and mosaics, can have a texture that is fine, smooth, and glossy.  Tiles complement town-garden entryways and patios, wrought iron fencing, ornamental arches, small-leaved groundcover, smooth foliaged plants, hard-fire clay pots, and stone containers.

 

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Design: Michelle Derviss, Landscapes Designed

Fanciful mosaic garden path

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A single polished painted tile floats on concrete

wall.

 

To draw attention to an area, use medium-sized, glossy leaved plants.

 

Concrete can be made and poured in any color and texture.

 

Use mulch for a soft, dull surfaced pathway.  Mulch allows water to penetrate the soil and helps prevent weed germination.

 

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Gravel is good for achieving a hard, dull surface. Pea gravel has the finest texture, however, it needs to be replenished often due to gravel seepage (loss of rock due to tamping down and spillover into adjacent beds). Gravel surfaces are attractive, informal, low maintenance and allow water to penetrate the soil. It is a good idea to edge gravel areas to help prevent seepage.

 

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The gravel path lends informality to the

elegant garden.

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The gravel path also allows for water penetration

and dispersion away from the house.

 

Transition

Transition is the gradual change from one scheme to another. Applying transition, as with the other design concepts, helps create a surrounding that is pleasing to the eye. For example, to entice an individual from an enclosed, intimate area to one that is spacious and open, the designer will make the gradual transition by placing plants and forms that graduate in size, height, texture, color, etc. along the exiting pathway.  By doing so, one is gently drawn into the open, spacious area.

 

IMG00051

Design: Michelle Derviss, Landscapes Designed

The stepped wall and smooth pathway provide a transition from one
garden area to another.

 

Helpful suggestions on transition:

 

Transitioning can create a feeling of distance both visually and physically. To generate transition, first choose a focal point that is prominent on the site: a distant hill, structure, a large tree, or a shrub. Place tall plants near an area where someone would naturally stand. Position shorter plants along the pathway heading to the focal point. Transition from dark to pale colors and from coarse to fine textures.

 

To shorten the distance, use the opposite approach.

 

Shallow

The distance between the hills and the sky is shortened by the

blue hues of the pool.

 

Before you start laying out your garden on paper, there may be other details (building codes, utilities, soil, weather/climate, etc.) that need to be addressed in planning your garden. Refer to the first section of the Questionnaire for this information.