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Have you been looking for the best advice in relation to landscape designs.
Have you been looking for the best advice in relation to landscape designs. When you are on the lookout for better advice about landscape designs, you'll find it's complex sorting out quality information from ill-advised landscape designs...
Keeping Soil Healthy
Soil is a composition of weather-beaten rock, minerals, decayed
plant materials and other organic ingredients. All this takes a
long time to develop, but can be damaged by our action or
neglect in a single season.
Plants can obtain nutrients...
Rooftop deck makeover
Flat rooftops can offer great opportunities for conversion into attractive entertaining or relaxing areas, but contemplating a vast expanse of drab concrete or asphalt and envisaging how to attack such a problem, can be a rather daunting prospect. ...
The Beautiful Rose of Sharon
Perhaps you were browsing the pages of a catalog and found a beautiful picture of the Rose of Sharon (Hibiscus Sriacus)? Or maybe you were lucky enough to see a Rose of Sharon in person at a local garden center? Are you wondering whether these will...
THREE EASY GARDEN DESIGNS YOU CAN CREATE
Garden No. 1: The Japanese garden.
Creating a Japanese garden is an interesting project because the Japanese garden design depends on symbolism as much as it depends on plant elements.
What is most important for a Japanese garden design is a...
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Japanese Gardens vs. Western Gardens
Japanese Gardens vs Western Gardens
Japanese gardens can be found at Buddhist temples or Shinto
shrines but they are finding their way into many famous western
landmarks such as the Japanese Tea Gardens in San Franciso,
California and the Chicago Botanic Garden. These beautiful
gardens are also popular in private homes.
What is the difference between a Japanese garden and a
Western garden?
The Western garden usually has more of a utilitarian purpose.
The Japanese garden is intended to represent nature.
The Western garden may use a variety of colors, such as in a
floral border. The Japanese garden focuses mainly on the color
green with trees and shrubs providing a subtle variety of
shades. If color is used at all, it is usually in a solid block.
Western gardens often have large trees along with smaller shrubs
that may have been trimmed into geometric
shapes. Japanese
gardens like to train plants and trees to try and capture the
essential shape of the plant.
Most Western gardeners tend to employ a 50-50 symmetrical
balance with a central focus point. Japanese gardens have a
60-40 or 70-30 balance and the focal point is never in the
center of the garden.
While both Western and Japanese gardens use water, stone and
other garden elements, the Western gardens typically feature
fountains, benches and statuary that are meant to stand out
against the natural background. The Japanese gardens will
contain rustic stone, lanterns, water basins and bamboo fences
which blend in with their natural surroundings.
Whether for viewing from a path or for sitting in contemplation,
the Japanese garden will provide a beautiful Eastern oasis to
the hurried Western world.
About the author:
Abbey Terreno loves to share her extensive knowledge on
gardening and landscape design. See more of her articles at
http://www.completelandscapedesign.com.
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