Archives for category: Uncategorized

 

soil

so1

 

 

 

tech1

 

tech2.jpeg

Hatching is an easy way to add texture, depth, and dark-and-light to your landscape design drawing.  Here is a hatching alphabet of different kinds of lines.

hatch1

In this drawing exercise, pick out one or two of the alphabets, and use it to fill up the plants.  Not all full of lines, not uniformly, not all the same kind of density.  Stretch em out, speckle them, throw them here and there.  Imagine the tree is singing on a fall morning.  Crisp breezes and blue skies, a  few wispy clouds.  Or, perhaps an hour before nightfall.  Swallows are hunting and leaves are quivering.  Use your lines to show feeling and movement.  Dynamic natural tension.

hatch2.jpeg

It helps to observe trees in nature, and grab a few leaves or branches.  Get to know them by touch and smell.  Yes every tree is different.  Do not imagine that all trees are simply round cylinders or cones!  Nature is not flat and perfect like a make up job or a sheet of copper!  She is full of ins and outs, dents and spirals, billowing masses and sharp holes.  This is important to convey.  And it is sometimes difficult if you are not used to such surfaces.  Observe them and fall in love with them.

hatch3

Try using a hatching alphabet that is not your first choice and play with it.  Drawing is supposed to be fun and free, not forced and constricting.  Theres always an unexpected surprise around the next corner.  Watch for it, and keep drawing until you think you are almost there.  Stop before you go too far and ruin the whole picture…

 

hatch4.jpeg

Oh no you messed it all up.  Go easy, what is left undrawn and blank is as important as the lines themselves.  Find a balance.  It is ok.  Drawing is infinite!  Heres a few more exercises.  If a garden is truly a paradise and sometimes an extension of the home’s interior, why are so many fences unfinished?  That is, why are we staring at lumber frames and posts?  How about finishing the fence walls with some art, mosaics, mirrors, and frames?  Give it a shot…

hatch5

And a pot of plants?

hatch6

 

Lastly, go inside of a tree.  Either climb it, or transfer your minds eye into the tree itself.  Theres branches.  Some are tight against the trunk, others flow bendy style out to the side, or arch like caverns.  Theres fat bottle like trunks, and skinny pole trunks full of side arms.  For this exercise, draw just the branches.  Yes, every tree has a certain character and disposition.  In part, it is formed by how it is structured in relation to the sun.  Wonderful canopy of leaves.   Observation is the key, keep your eyes open for our green friends!

hatch7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

plantchem1.jpeg

plantchem2.jpeg

plantchem3.jpeg

Hardscape is everything that is not plants.  The deck, stone patio, metal trellis, and granite pathway.  When you create a garden, it is useful to consider not only the cost and appearance of hardscape, but how it changes and ages over time outdoors.  Also, where did the material come from?  Did you find it on the street?  Or was it dug out of  a riverbed three thousand miles away?  Ultimately, how does it make the garden feel?

hard1

hard2

hard4

hard5

hard6

hard7

hard8

hard9

hard10

hard11

hard12