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Principles of Landscape Design

Are you a homeowner who appreciates having your garden looking hearty and healthy? Sometimes it can be challenging to make sure that your flowers and plants grow properly, but you don’t need to be an expert gardener to have a beautiful garden. Fortunately for those of us who haven’t developed our green thumbs yet, there are a couple of tricks that can help! One of these tricks includes using compost or mulch in your garden. On the other hand, there are a couple of questions that need to be answered first. Which one is best and what are the differences between them?

Contrast and Harmony

Contrast will help enhance particular elements in your landscape design, while harmony helps elements in a landscape design look unified. Contrasting elements also grab your guest’s attention when they’re placed side by side. Contrast and harmony are attained by the proximity of the elements of art or using complementary colors beside each other.

Proportion

The size of an element in relation to another is known as proportion. When designing a landscape, proportion is probably the most obvious of all but still will require some thought and planning. You need to make sure that the elements that you use in your landscape design have the proper proportions.

  • It is able to maintain the moisture in the soil. Your plants will find it easier to get water and moisture, as it will not dry up as fast. Additionally, more nutrients will be retained in the soil, making it rich and easier for your plants to grow.
  • Mulch naturally fights weed growth. When undesirable seeds are blown into a part of your garden that is covered in mulch, the weeds can’t take root and grow. In general, this will benefit you, as you won’t have to spend time and effort weeding your garden.
  • Mulch helps manages temperatures so that plants have a better chance of thriving outdoors. In colder temperatures, mulch can safeguard roots and lowers the probability of plants being uprooted due to the contracting soil. In warmer temperatures, the roots are kept healthy and cool.

Balance

Balance is simply a feeling of equality. 2 basic types of balance in landscape design are symmetrical and asymmetrical balance. Using symmetrical balance, 2 sides of the landscape will coincide with each other. When using asymmetrical balance, the landscape design is balanced utilizing various elements and features that have a similar fictional weight.

Color

Color provides your landscape design with the aspect of real life. Warmer colors seem to advance, making a landscape features seem closer. While cool colors like greens and blues seem to move away and shows perspective.

Transition

Transition is simply just a gradual shift. Transition in landscape design is shown by gradually varying plant sizes or the intensity of color. Transition can also be applied to texture, the size and shape of foliage or other design elements.

Line

In landscape design line is the beginning of all design elements. Lines are used just about everywhere including designing flower beds, walkways and entryways, texture and perspective. Lines are also used to give an illusion of distance and depth.

Unity

Unity in landscaping is the consistency and repetition in your design. Applying consistency to create unity by gathering various elements of a landscape together to create a common theme. Repetition is used to bring unity into your design by repeating associated elements which incorporate decor and plants into the design.

Repetition

Repetition is directly associated to unity. It’s good to have various elements and forms in a landscape but repeating the same elements can give your design several issues. If there are too many objects that are not associated with each other can cause your design look muddled and unplanned. Also, try to avoid overusing an element because overusing an element can make your design seem uninteresting and boring.

Landscape Design Conclusion

When you use the 8 principles of landscape design, designing your landscape can be a delightful way to release your creative side. The usage of color, contrast, and lines all can help affect the design of your landscape. When designing a new landscape, or enhancing the one you have currently, the experts at Desert Foothills Gardens Nursery, Inc. know how to incorporate design to provide you with a practical backyard that is also pleasing to the eye.

Desert Foothills Gardens Is A Landscape Design Company in Cave Creek

Desert Foothills Gardens Nursery offers landscape design in Cave Creek, Arizona. If you are looking for the best quality, widest selection, and healthiest plants to put in your landscape or garden in the Phoenix area, Desert Foothills Gardens Nursery is your #1 source. If you would like to view our desert plant selection stop by our nursery in Cave Creek or give us a call at (480) 488-9455.

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Sonoran Desert Landscape Rocks

If you are searching “Sonoran Desert Landscape Rock Phoenix” or something like them,such as decorative flagstone, Grand Canyon boulders or minerals, Desert Foothills Gardens Nursery, Inc can help! For sonoran desert landscape rock call us today at 480-488-9455. Our selection of Sonoran desert landscape rock is extensive enough to fit and flatter the aesthetic of any outdoor space.

Desert Landscape Rock

Desert Foothills Gardens Nursery, Inc. has a huge selection of attractive rocks, boulders, and minerals. We have rocks and boulders that come in many sizes and we are sure we can help you find the right rocks and minerals to suit your outdoor living areas. Our inventory changes daily so we recommend visiting our nursery and seeing our rocks and minerals in person!

Flagstone

Flagstone is a generic description of a flat stone that is usually used in building and landscaping. It is a sedimentary stone that is cut into thin layers, letting it to be used in a lot of applications. Flagstone is a sandstone that usually contains feldspar and quartz, often bound together with calcium, silica or iron oxide. This type of stone if called flagstone because they are usually split easily into flat pieces that can be used to pave walkways, cover walls and serve in any number of creative home and landscaping uses.

Thundereggs

Thundereggs are a nodule-like rock, not unlike a geode, that is commonly created inside rhyolitic volcanic ash layers. Usually thundereggs have an outer layer that is concentric but the center material is layered as if they were a sedimentary layer. Agates are not volcanic, even though they are usually found in volcanic rock, simply because they tend to have a lot of open cavities and are a valuable source of dissolved silica. Most are about the size and shape of a tennis or baseball, and they commonly have a brownish or gray rind which is irregular like a cauliflower and marked by a simple pattern of several noticeable ridges.

Azurite

Azurite acquires its name from its glorious azure-blue color, which makes it a very popular and familiar mineral. Azurite has deep distinct shades of blue, which are drawn out from its fusion with Malachite, a closely related mineral that consists of almost the same chemistry.

Petrified Wood

Petrified wood are tree or tree like plants that have entirely turned to stone over long periods of time. All the organic matter in the tree is replaced by minerals, mainly silica, leaving a lot of the features such as tree rings that are still distinguishable. Petrified wood can also be used to calm down fight or flight fears. Petrified wood were treasured in the past as they were believed to contain the wisdom from the tree in which they were created.

Onyx

Onyx is a type of sedimentary stone created deep in caves from micro-crystalline quartz, developing into stalactites and stalagmites. It is more fragile than other types of stone, affected by both chemical and abrasive degradation, therefore acceptable for low traffic areas or for a vertical use. Onyx is favored for its transparency; its elegance can be brightened by being back lit. It has colors ranging from tanish neutrals, to white, all the way to dazzling blues, reds, and greens.

Jasper

Jasper is commonly treated as a micro-crystalline; sometimes, however, it is put it in a group by itself within the quartz family because of its grainy type structure. The most familiar patterning in jasper include impressive marbling and veining, some types orbital rings, lines, spots, striping and striating.

Chrysocolla

Chrysocolla is a copper like stone, with colors varying from light greens to deep blues, and is usually associated with Malachite and Azurite. Chrysocolla has many healing properties, such as a calming effect. It is also said to empower women, and helps keep people  mellow.

Calcite

Calcite builds up and enhances energy. This makes it an perfect stone for distance healing, as well as other kinds of healing. Calcite combines with other minerals to create limestone which is then used in construction projects. This calcite form of calcium carbonate is found in all types of rock.

Granite

Granite is a light-colored igneous rock with grains large enough to be seen with the naked eye. It develops from the slow crystallization of magma just below Earth’s surface. Granite comes in varying colors, commonly pink to gray or occasionally black. Granite is a natural stone that took mother nature millions of years to create and exists in just about every part of the world.

Green Calcite

Imported from Africa, Brazil, India, and Mexico — Calcium Carbonate, commonly known as “green calcite”— is a stone admired both aesthetically and medicinally that is often administered to the heart chakra in crystal therapy. Calcite makes up a significant part of limestone and marble.  It is an incredible stone to make use of for those who raise and tend to gardens.

Landscaping Rocks Arizona

If you are interested in increasing the beauty of your landscape by buying desert rocks, stop by our convenient location at 33840 N. Cave Creek Rd., in Cave Creek, give us a call at (480) 488-9455 to schedule a visit to your home.