Garden Layering Landscaping Technique - A Simple Way To Layer Beauty Into Your Garden
August 1, 2009 by admin
Garden layering landscaping is a simple yet effective technique for increasing the depth and beauty of your garden design.
By placing your plants in rows at various heights, you can expose more of your plants and flowers in a smaller area, giving it a richer and fuller look.
This garden layering article is brought to you by LidoGates, a custom wood gate company providing excellent quality garden wood gates for various cities in Southern California.
For more information on how you can get a beautiful custom wood gate for your garden, contact:
LidoGates
949-642-1111
PO BOX 3253
Newport Beach, CA.
92659
Garden layering is a simple and effective landscaping technique that can easily enhance the look of your outdoor garden. By layering your garden landscaping beds you will be able to add a whole other level of beauty to your landscaping design. Remember that besides your garden wood gate, your yard is the first thing that people will notice.
The garden layering landscaping technique works like this: First, you need to identify the flowers that you are going to plant. The reason is that what you choose for your flowers and other plants will affect just how your garden landscaping is laid out.
For example you do not want to have the taller plants in front of the shorter ones. While this may seem obvious at first, many people overlook this when designing their landscaping since they normally forget to consider elevations. They sketch it out on a flat piece of paper looking down, considering only the border size of their garden. So when making your rough sketches, be sure to think about how the eye will perceive the garden from multiple side views and not just a top view.
Keep your garden design simple at first as your landscaping will go a lot faster this way and you will run into fewer problems as you go.
When doing the layering design you should start off with about three layers. Your back row should face north, if possible, and the back row should have the tallest plants. As the rows descend so should the heights of the plants and flowers.
Be sure to remember the eventual height of the plants when they are full grown. This idea is often overlooked since we typically purchase plants when they are small and we sometimes forget that once their are full grown they may block the view of the plants in the rows behind it. So you will need to talk to those working at your local gardening store about how large the plants will grow to be.
This layering effect of your garden landscaping design is sure to add a new level of beauty, depth and interest to your garden.
Asian Themed Gates For Your Japanese Garden
July 27, 2009 by admin
A custom Asian themed gate will complete the look of your Japanese garden. LidoGates has an assortment of resin-encapsulated bamboos and reeds that can be the perfect accent, giving your Japanese garden a clean and serene nuance.
For more information on how you can get a custom built Asian themed gate for your Japanese garden, contact:
LidoGates
949-642-1111
PO BOX 3253
Newport Beach, CA.
92659
Japanese gardening is designed to produce a scene that mimics nature through the use of trees, shrubs, rocks, sand, artificial hills, ponds, and flowing water as art-forms. Zen and Shinto themes are a large part of Japanese gardening, giving the gardens a contemplative and reflective state of mind. Japanese gardening differs from Western style gardens and most would say it is far more serene and introspective.
In Japanese gardening there are three basic methods for scenery. The first of these is reduced scale. Reduced scale is the art of taking an actual scene from nature, mountains, rivers, trees, and all, and reproducing it on a smaller scale. Symbolization involves generalization and abstraction. An example of this would be using white sand to suggest the ocean. Borrowed views refers to artists that would use something like an ocean a forest as a background, but it would end up becoming an important part of the scene.
There are essentially two types of Japanese gardening: tsukiyami, which is a hill garden and mainly composed of hills and ponds. The other is hiraniwa, which is basically the exact opposite of tsukiyami: a flat garden without any hills or ponds.
The basic elements used in Japanese gardening include rocks, gravel, water, moss, stones, fences, and hedges. Rocks are most often used as centerpieces and bring a presence of spirituality to the garden. According to the Shinto tradition rocks embody the spirits of nature. Gravel is used as a sort of defining surface and is used to imitate the flow of water when arranged properly. Stones are used to create a boundary and are sculpted into the form of lanterns. Water, whether it be in the form of a pond, stream, or waterfall, is an essential part of a Japanese garden. It can be in the actual form of water or portrayed by gravel, but no matter what form water is in, it is crucial to a Japanese gardens balance.
There are several forms and types of plants that are signature of Japanese gardening, the main one being Bonsai. Bonsai is the art of training everyday, average plants, such as Pine, Cypress, Holly, Cedar, Cherry, Maple, and Beech, to look like large, old trees just in miniature form. These trees range from five centimeters to one meter and are kept small by pruning, re-potting, pinching of growth, and wiring the branches.
Japanese gardening is a tradition that has crossed the Muso Soseki, poet, said “Gardens are a root of transformation”. A Japanese garden is sure to bring about many different feelings and is definitely a transforming experience.

