Rss Feed
Tweeter button
Facebook button

Designing a small garden to yield big results

I recently moved to a home with acreage, but quickly realized that even large lots have small or quirky outdoor spaces that must be designed carefully and thoughtfully.

Fortunately, with attention to appropriate plant and variety choices, just about anything that can be done to dress up a larger space can be done on a smaller scale with equal success.

Even the smallest spaces can be made to appear larger with a few design tricks that fool the eye into thinking the space is bigger than it actually is.

Some ideas:

— Garden in layers. Layers give the illusion of more space than you really have. “Garden Up,” a book by California landscape designers Rebecca Sweet and Susan Morrison, recommends that we think in terms of three layers: top, middle and bottom. For the tallest layer, choose vines that naturally grow flat against a wall, vase-shaped plants or trees you can train or shape to allow plenty of room for planting beneath them.

In the middle layer, select plants that are 3-4 feet tall, with a vertical, light, open habit, such as perennials with tall flower stalks or finely textured ornamental grasses. The reason is how our eyes perceive depth. If we can see several things at once where we might otherwise only see one, it tricks the eye into thinking the space is bigger than it is, and gives the area a more overall lush feel.

The bottom layer should fill in the gaps and can offer multiseason interest. Select small-scale grasses, ground-hugging shrubs and compact perennials to visually anchor the bottom.

— Introduce color with non-plant selections. Depending on flower color to provide accent and impact in your design can be risky in a small space. Since every inch must count, a potentially underperforming flower display can diminish the impact, and even the most accomplished plant experts struggle here. Instead, bring in color through other objects, such as brightly painted furniture, accessories, wall objects or garden art.

— Ditch the dirt. With limited overall space, yielding some of that to a patch of dirt for planting may seem impractical, and it often is. Instead, consider making a limited outdoor space feel like a continuation of the indoors. That may include replacing dirt for brick pavers, tile or concrete. Then add an all-weather area rug to give the feel of another room. Add attractive planting containers of different shapes and sizes and fill them with a variety of plants and trees. You’ll have an instant garden, and another room to extend the living space.

— Maximize usable space. The recurring theme by all designers when it comes to making a small area look its best is to take advantage of every inch of space, especially vertical opportunities.

In just a glance, visitors may get the sense that they’ve seen all there is to see in a small garden. That can be disappointing. So keep it interesting and mysterious. Add other objects like a small water feature, or even a mirror to give the illusion the space continues. Tuck in a few surprises that require a more lingering stroll through the garden. Containers work very well, either as a focal point or when tucked discreetly in the back of a bed where they aren’t immediately on display. Other tricks include a garden path that leads beyond the field of view, even if it stops just around the corner. The eye is again tricked to thinking there is more than there actually is.

(Joe Lamp’l, host and executive producer of “Growing a Greener World” on PBS, is an author and a paid spokesman for the Mulch and Soil Council. Contact him at email@joegardener.com. For more information, visit www.joegardener.com. For more stories, visit shns.com.)

Eco-friendly, 15-acre rose garden designed around Presidential Center

One of the most talked-about features at the George W. Bush Presidential Center has quickly become the Texas Rose Garden—a 15-acre park just outside the steps of the center’s full-scale replica of the Oval Office.

Despite the name, the garden’s design, in which former First Lady Laura Bush played an active role in, will not showcase a majority of roses. Rather, the focus has been placed on wildflowers native to Texas and many specific even to Dallas.

Project manager Herb Sweeney IV of Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, Inc. told the Dallas Morning News that wildflowerswill be rotated seasonally and the colors schemes will match the essence of each season.

The garden will also utilize eco-friendly irrigation by collecting and reusing rainwater. The Bush Center itself earned the Platinum classification for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, which is the “highest level in the U.S. Green Building Council,” as explained on the Bush Center website.

According to the project description by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, “the landscape…contributes to the Presidential Center’s ambitious sustainability objectives,” citing specifically the factors of “biodiversity, restoring native habitat, reducing the need for irrigation, and employing an organic maintenance program.”

The Texas Rose Garden joins the Bush Center as another cohesive facet that will be officially unveiled Thursday.

London College of Garden Design launches inspirational day to support …

The London College of Garden Design

The London College of Garden Design has become the first garden design college to launch a special professional development day supporting their recent graduates.

Director Andrew Fisher Tomlin said “we were conscious that it is tough out there and we want our graduates to succeed in their new careers so we decided to offer them a free focussed day’s training to update them on the skills that really matter.”

The 2013 Graduate Inspiration Day will inspire new thinking and update professional business skills. As well as the College Directors graduates will benefit from specialist talks on engaging customers through social media and how to create a business that is bigger than just themselves.

Fisher Tomlin added “we always want to display the talents and achievements of our students and graduates and this new day is another way in which they get value for the investment that they have made with us. It is vital that our students succeed as it reflects on all we do for them.”

In recent years London College of Garden Design students have won more awards in the Society of Garden Designers Awards than any other college and in 2012 and 2013 students have reached the finals of the RHS Young Garden Designer of the Year competition. Many now work with some of the world’s leading designers such as Andy Sturgeon and Luciano Giubbelei.

-ENDS-

About the London College of Garden Design

The London College of Garden Design aims to offer the best professional garden design courses available in the UK. The College is one of Europe’s leading specialist design colleges and offers professional level courses including the one year Garden Design Diploma which is taught from the Orangery Conference facilities at the world famous Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew and Regents College in central London. The college also has a partnership with the Royal Horticultural Society offering short courses at RHS Garden Wisley.

The London College of Garden Design’s short course programme is available at a number of locations. To find out more visit http://www.lcgd.org.uk/

For more information please contact Andrew Fisher Tomlin on 01276 855977 or 07957 855457

This press release was distributed by SourceWire News Distribution on behalf of e-Zone UK in the following categories:
Business Finance, Education Human Resources, Construction Property, Men’s Interest, Leisure Hobbies, Home Garden, Women’s Interest, Environment Nature.
For more information visit http://www.sourcewire.com

Raymond Blanc launches competition to design heritage kitchen garden

By Sarah Cosgrove
22 April 2013

Owner of Eye of the Day Garden Design Center Invited to Milan Design Week

  • Email a friend

Santa Barbara, CA (PRWEB) April 14, 2013

Owner of Eye of the Day Garden Design Center, Brent Freitas, has been invited to attend the Design Week Fuori Salone, Milano in Milan. Freitas will be attending the event from April 9 to 14 and will be attending with Eye of the Day partners Terrecotte San Rocco and Angelo Grassi.

The annual furniture exhibition, also known as Milan Design Week, is the largest trade fair in the world. Internationally famed vendors and designers attend from around the world to showcase innovative furniture and other designs, including lighting, home furnishings, and garden pots and décor.

“I’m really excited to have Eye of the Day work with Terrecotte San Rocco and Angelo Grassi,” said Freitas. “Our Italian terracotta pots are popular buys for customers looking for a luxe outdoor look. It’s a real experience to attend the fair with the best of the best in the industry, and to see what other products are trending.”

Milan Design Week was established in 1961 and the trade show mainly focused on Italian furniture. Now, the show features more than 2,500 vendors in a 2,500,000-square-foot venue, and close to 300,000 attendees are expected from more than 150 countries.

“I want people to know that garden design isn’t just a potted plant placed here and there. We work with clients like Tommy Bahama and Ralph Lauren to create aesthetic environments to take outdoor décor to an entirely different, eye-pleasing level.”

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center is located in Santa Barbara, and offers more than an acre of high quality garden landscape products, including Italian fountains and terracotta pottery. Eye of the Day is a leading importer of fine European pottery, and works with customers ranging from private consumers to landscape and design firms from around the world.

About Eye of the Day Garden Design Center

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center is a retail showroom that features more than an acre of high quality garden landscape products, including Italian terracotta pottery and fountains, Greek terracotta pottery, French Anduze pottery, and garden product manufacturers from America’s premier concrete garden pottery and decoration manufacturers. Eye of the Day is a leading importer and distributor of fine European garden pottery, and caters to private consumers and landscape design and architecture firms around the world.

To see what Eye of the Day Garden Design Center offers, visit http://www.eyeofthedaygdc.com.

Email a friend


PDF


Print

Sensory Gardens: designing an outdoor space for the senses

Public examples that can provide inspiration include the William T. Bacon Sensory Garden at the Chicago Botanic Garden, and the Lerner Garden of the Five Senses at the Coastal Maine Botanic Garden in Boothbay.

At the Bacon, a large sycamore tree with mottled bark sits at the center, while a crabapple meadow bursts into a cloud of sweet-smelling pink and white in spring. At the Lerner, a labyrinth path made of smooth stones is a reflexologist’s delight. Weeping larches flank the entry, and vertical cage planters called “flower towers” are stocked by garden staff with a variety of flavorful plantings. Stone sinks offer water to cleanse the palate.

In California’s Napa and Sonoma valleys, there are wine sensory gardens; the Kendall Jackson Wine Estate has a pinot garden where visitors sample the strawberries, cherries and blackberries that inform the varietal’s flavor.

If you want to create your own sensory garden, consider two things: your area’s hardiness zone and which senses you want to focus on.

The former can be ascertained at www.garden.org; knowing your zone will help you choose plants that will thrive. If your regional public garden has a sensory exhibit, representatives there can help with sources and inspiration. And even if you find something you love that’s a bit tender for your zone, you can still plant it — just use a container so you can move it to a warmer, protected area when weather threatens.

As for the senses, think about what attracts you to a garden. Is it mostly the scents, or is it the visuals? Perhaps you’re moved by how elements in a garden sound. Or are you a tactile person who likes to touch every plant, rock and tree?

Make sure guests to your garden can linger and enjoy its sensory pleasures, says Margie Grace, a garden designer and owner of Grace Design Associates in Santa Barbara, Calif.

“There should be places to sit; places to slow down; places to feel the warmth of the sun, drink in the fragrant flowers, and hear the trickle of a stream or the music of wind chimes,” she says.

Sensory gardens are also a great way to involve kids in gardening, says Emily Jackson of the Appalachian Sustainable Agricultural Project in Asheville, N.C. Plant herbs such as mint and lemon that are easy, prolific and have familiar scents. Or think about the ingredients of kids’ favorite foods — the oregano, tomatoes, onions and basil that go into spaghetti sauce, for example.

Try growing some unusual things, too: carrots and potatoes in unusual colors, purple beans that turn green when you cook them, or watermelon radishes.

“Radishes are very easy to grow. Kids don’t seem to like them much except for these watermelon ones, which are colorful and less spicy,” says Jackson, who works with an initiative called “Growing Minds: Farm to School,” which helps schools build gardens.

Landscape design seminar will help get your garden growing: A Place in the Sun

columnist_kovach.gif

Now that the worst of the cold weather (fingers crossed) is history, it’s time to turn your thoughts to everything outdoors, including the garden.

West Park Community Garden and Puritas Nursery are ready to help residents learn how to freshen up and personalize their landscape at a free seminar on landscaping beginning at 1:30 p.m. April 21 at Puritas Nursery, 19201 Puritas Ave., in Cleveland’s West Park neighborhood.

Attendees should bring the following information: size of proposed garden (length, width), direction the area faces (north, south, east, west), light (sun, partial sun, shade), condition of the soil (clay, loamy), plant material on site and how much time you will have to devote to the space. Pictures of the proposed site are recommended and should display the relationship between the site and the house, windows, other landscaping, lawn, etc.

Barb O’Patry, an Ohio State University Master Gardener, will discuss a variety of topics on landscape design 1:30-2 p.m., then seminar participants can meet with an expert 2-3 p.m. to discuss their landscape projects and receive suggestions on enhancing their landscaping. Each participant will leave with a design for his or her landscape project and complimentary refreshments will be served.

Immediately after sessions with the expert, about 3 p.m., there will be a nursery tour with Dale Heyink, owner of Puritas Nursery, who will highlight which plants grow well in this area. He also will answer questions on plants and landscaping. Seminar participants will receive a 10 percent discount on all purchases made that day at the nursery.

ON STAGEMary Welch of St. Brendan Parish in North Olmsted sends word that the junior high drama department at St. Brendan School will present “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” at 7 p.m. April 19 and 20 at Fairview High School Auditorium, 4507 W. 213th St., Fairview Park.

John FitzGerald is the director and Kristen Mooney is faculty moderator. The cast includes 23 sixth- through eighth-graders and a chorus of fifth-graders (including my two nieces, Kathryn and Elizabeth Rajnicek). Tickets are available at the door for $5 (adults), $3 (students) and free for children 2 and younger. Family maximum is $20.

Break a leg, thespians!

AND THE WINNER IS — Congratulations to Helen Davis. Tom Davis, president of Fairview Park Community Council, tells me that Helen was selected as the 2013 Citizen of the Year by five of the most recent citizen of the year winners.

Helen will be honored at the annual banquet, which begins at 6:30 p.m. May 1 at Fairview Park Senior Center, 20769 Lorain Road (behind City Hall). Limited tickets are available at $25 each on a first-come, first-served basis, starting today at City Hall, the Senior Center or by calling Roberta Sunkle, 440-333-9339.

Individuals or businesses interested in donating raffle prizes for the dinner should call Judy Nicoloff, 440-331-0987, Sunkle, or Tom Davis, 440-333-8721, to arrange for donation pickups.

SPEAKING OF COTY — North Olmsted Community Council will have its Citizen of the Year banquet at 6:30 p.m. April 25 at North Olmsted Party Center, 29271 Lorain Road. This year’s winner will be announced that night.

Tom and Nadine Dubowski, who handle event publicity, said tickets, at $18, can be purchased by sending a request with your name, address and the number of tickets needed, along with a check payable to NOCC to P.O. Box 135, North Olmsted, OH 44070.

AT THE LIBRARY — The West Park Branch of Cleveland Public Library will host author Marty Gitlin at 2 p.m. April 20. Gitlin, a freelance author and sports writer from North Olmsted, will discuss his book, “The Great American Cereal Book.”

The book, which has gained international attention, includes every type of cereal ever produced — about 800 — from 1863 to modern times. Gitlin said this year is the 150th anniversary of breakfast cereals.

EARTH DAY — Celebrate Earth Day with a hike 3-4 p.m. April 22 in the Rocky River Reservation of the Cleveland Metroparks.

Meet under the Brookpark Road Bridge off Valley Parkway, between Brookway Lane and Puritas Avenue. Call 440-734-6660 for information.

NIGHT AT THE RACES — St. Joseph Academy Athletic Boosters will have a night at the races 6 p.m. to midnight April 20 at the Academy Center, 3470 Rocky River Drive, West Park.

Cindy Burry says tickets are $20 per person and horses can be purchased for $20 each. To reserve tickets, call Patti, 216-548-4485, or send an email message to sja1890.org/boosters.

SUPPORT SANE — April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month and the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner program at Fairview Hospital is seeking donations of new packages of underwear and socks for patients.

SANE programs care for hundreds of patients who arrive at the hospital because of sexual violence or violence at home. Clothing is taken as part of the evidence collection process and replacement clothing is provided free by SANE.

Undergarments can be dropped off at the hospital emergency department. For more information, call Fairview Hospital’s SANE program at 216-476-7278.

INFORMATION, PLEASE — A Place in the Sun includes news and information about people, places and things in Cleveland’s West Park area, Fairview Park and North Olmsted. Submit column items to ckovach@sunnews.com, fax them to (216) 986-2340, Attention: Carol Kovach, or mail them to me at 5510 Cloverleaf Parkway, Cleveland, OH 44125.

Garden design a frame of mind

Few things are more satisfying than sinking your teeth into a cherry tomato, snap pea, or crunchy carrot from your own garden. I can’t think of any better summer hobby than cultivating a veggie plot; few other investments yield dividends like they can.

If you’ve got a patch of land you want to sink your teeth into, keep these tips in mind. Many eager gardeners fall victim to common traps which, unfortunately, can lead them to abandon their efforts in frustration.

Be realistic

Before you tear up your entire back lawn, take a deep breath. It’s very, very easy to get caught up in the excitement of an edible garden and over-extend yourself. It is, after all, a palpably exciting prospect.

Be realistic with yourself about the time that you have to invest. Do you have a half hour a day, or can you only manage an hour on Saturdays? Determine the size of your plot by the time commitment you can give. If you trick yourself into thinking that you can add an hour to every day, your dreams of fresh tomatoes can turn into a weedy nightmare.

If you don’t have much time to spend, consider a 10 feet by 10 feet plot. This 100 square feet will give you space to grow the basics. If you have more time to spend, notch the size up accordingly, but be cautious; the goal is to finish the season invigorated and eager, not frustrated and tired.

Where is

your garden?

Edible plants typically require six hours of light a day, although there are exceptions on either side. Where you situate your plot will largely determine what varieties you can grow.

If you live on a mature lot with big trees on all sides, sunlight may be scarce. Consider planting tomatoes, peppers, and other heat-lovers in dark containers to keep their roots warm and to elevate them for more light. If they still don’t get six hours on a sunny day, consider growing them elsewhere.

Partially shaded gardens, especially those which receive morning light, are ideal for growing salad greens; like lettuce and spinach, root veggies like carrots and beets, and broccoli. If you like Eastern cuisine, your shady plot may be ideal for bok choi and snow peas.

With sun drenched yards, which are the norm with newer houses flanked by immature trees, your options open up considerably. You’ll be able to grow heat-loving plants in the ground, but will need to think about shading cool-weather crops.

If you love spinach, but are short on shade, get creative. Use plants on trellises, like cucumbers and vining tomatoes, strategically to shade the salad greens and root veggies in their northern shadow.

Lastly, make sure your location is close to a convenient water source and, if you or your neighbour have a persistent weed patch, opt for a spot as far from it as possible. You’ll spend most gardening hours watering or weeding; anything that cuts back on hauling hoses and tugging dandelions is a blessing.

Laying out your garden

Now that you’ve chosen your size and spot, it’s time to think about layout. There are several options, each with its own set of pros and cons.

If you choose to plant in traditional rows, I suggest laying a board down (two inch by eight inch or so) to walk on. This will not only keep the mud off your shoes, but it will reduce weeds and the soil underfoot won’t turn into concrete from constant walking.

Rows allow for excellent air circulation, but aren’t very space efficient. Planting several rows together will help, but make sure not to plant things so close that they inhibit each others’ growth.

Planting in tight squares is gaining in popularity because the crowded spaces help keep weeds down. On the con side, tightly planted formations inhibit air circulation, so I don’t recommend it for sheltered gardens.

Rob Sproule is the co-owner of Salisbury Greenhouse in Sherwood Park. He can be reached at rob@salisburygreenhouse.com.

Garden designs that give back

Good landscapes aren’t just sustainable, Mary Palmer Dargan insists; they also sustain us. Gardens grow our food, give us shade, calm frazzled nerves and nudge us toward the deep solace that a quiet connection with the natural world can provide. They provide play sites and recreational opportunities for children and families, social venues for adults, and the occasional retreat for those seeking solitude. Properly designed and maintained, they age gracefully and allow us to do the same.

Dargan, a landscape architect who with her similarly credentialed husband co-wrote an earlier book focused on the aesthetics and strategy of landscape design, takes a slightly more abstract tone in her new book, Lifelong Landscape Design. While the former effort discussed mostly design principles, this book casts a broader, more philosophical net. Dargan still argues the merits of beauty and good design, but here turns toward their more far-reaching virtues and influence.

The underlying structural patterns of good garden design can number in the hundreds, Dargan says, and are site-specific. The essential components are far fewer, and that’s where the book aims. The first among them, in the author’s list, is connection with the web of life. That is, the proper context for landscape design isn’t merely the incidental topography of the site or the architectural style of the home. Those things matter, but so do the surrounding community or neighborhood and the biological ecosystem that supports them. We must both rely on the resilience of nature and respect its limitations for self- healing, and that means treading as lightly on the land as possible:

• Leave natural elements alone when possible: Compaction from vehicles or construction equipment can damage soils, feeder roots of trees and most small plants.

• Restore balance to the site: Soil erosion is typically one of the first consequences of site disturbance, so try to prevent/correct washouts, stream silting, and other problems by grading and planting the area for stability.

• Use sustainable building materials: Locally obtained natural materials often cost more than manufactured alternatives, but over the long term they typically involve a much lower demand for resources and energy. Recycled or easily recyclable manufactured materials can also offer this benefit.

• Harvest and conserve water: With more than half of the country experiencing drought conditions in 2012, there could hardly be a timelier message than this. It isn’t enough to manage the flow of water to prevent soil erosion; being able to capture, store and use rainwater is an essential feature of a sustainable landscape.

• Let nature rest: We don’t sleep with the lights on, so why should birds and other creatures in our midst have to do that? Landscape lighting fixtures should be low and small, to enhance aesthetics and safety while not disturbing the surroundings.

• Keep up the good work: Occasional maintenance is a requirement for a healthy garden or landscape. Compost leaves, clippings and other organic materials to enrich the soil, and pay attention to plant health throughout the year.

Dargan offers similar guidelines for what she considers other essential components of good landscape design: encouraging social interaction and recreation, creating “passive” spaces where one can retreat briefly from worldly cares, promoting stress reduction and healthful physical activity, and other priorities.

Most of the recommendations stay centered around the four parts of master planning that her earlier book offered for landscape design: the approach/arrival features, which serve as a welcome mat to visitors approaching the home; the house itself, which serves as the hub for the surrounding landscape; perimeter spaces such as patios, decks, planting beds and other elements adjacent to the home’s exterior; and destinations with linkages, purpose-built spaces or features placed in the landscape and connected with pathways.

Readers looking for the nuts-and-bolts techniques of landscaping how-to or specific recommendations for plants and materials aren’t the intended audience here. There’s no shortage of those gardening guides, and the more regional the sources the better. Dargan has set her sights on less tangible aspects of fashioning a landscape, on the atmosphere that design choices ultimately create. This won’t be the guidebook you keep on hand while installing flagstone pavers or grading a slope into graceful terraces, but it could help you imagine the many potential dimensions of your landscape.

New e-Book Series– Japanese Garden Paths and Stepping Stone Paths in …

San Francisco, CA, April 18, 2013 –(PR.com)– Tokyo-based garden designer Keizo Hayano and German garden designer Jenny Feuerpeil write short e-books about Japanese garden culture on their website “Real Japanese Gardens.” A new series about elements of the Japanese garden (Japanese garden fences, Japanese garden paths and stone lanterns) is to be released within the next weeks.

The first e-book of the garden path series has 11 pages and 47 quality pictures of typical Japanese garden paths (nobedan) in Japan’s best gardens – from rock gardens in Kyoto to pond strolling gardens in Tokyo –the most beautiful garden paths have been chosen for this e-book.

The Shin-Gyo-So system, which originated in Japanese calligraphy, is also applied to garden paths and is introduced in this book. Numerous examples point out the differences of “Shin,” the formal, “Gyo,” the semi-formal, and “Sou,” the informal style of laid stone paths (shiki-ishi).

Garden designer and member of the Japanese Garden Design Association Keizo Hayano points out the important role of paths in a Japanese garden: “Paths are not only a safe and comfortable way for the visitor to move through the garden; skillfully laid stone paths also manipulate how the visitor perceives the garden. On a wide and even Shin-style path, the visitor can take in the view of the temple architecture or garden features while walking. On a narrow and uneven So-style stepping stone path in a Japanese tea garden however, the garden experience will be very different. Here, one has to carefully place one foot after the other, looking down while doing so. It is not only a small journey from the garden gate to the tea house, but also a journey to your inner self.”

Jenny Feuerpeil is the photographer of the garden pictures for this e-book. She says: “Visiting a Japanese garden is a holistic experience. All senses are engaged. In traditional Japanese gardens, natural stone is used almost exclusively. The texture and surface structure of a traditional garden path, the smooth surface and rounded edges of century old cut stone paths (nobedan) have a premium textural quality. I can recommend every Japan traveler to visit the gardens of Daitoku-ji, Tofuku-ji and Katsura Rikyu in Kyoto to see the world’s finest examples of garden paths.”

Currently the website www.japanesegardens.jp features basic information, pictures and directions to around 90 gardens in Japan. To date, 12 eBooks about famous, secret and private Japanese gardens have been published. Another 3 eBooks have been released about typical elements of a Japanese garden – traditional fences and gravel patterns. The first eBook in the plant category is an introduction to Japanese bamboo.

About us:
Providing reliable information to our readers is our highest priority. Before writing the e- book, we visit the garden and take photos of the garden and its features. Up to 80% of the research is done using Japanese resources (books, journals and interviews) to stay as close to the Japanese garden tradition as possible.

Keizo Hayano is a Japanese garden designer with 20 years of experience under his belt. He is the owner and head designer of the garden design studio Niwashyu in Shibuya, Tokyo (www.niwashyu.jp). He studied the fine arts at the Kyoto City College of Arts and loves small intimate gardens that soothe the soul. Member of the Japanese Association of Garden Designers.

Jenny Feuerpeil is a German garden designer who came to Japan hoping to soak up the essence of Japanese design. After leaving her job at a global IT company, she studied garden design in Chelsea, London and founded the garden design label Dendron Exterior Design (www.dendronexteriordesign.com).

In 2010, she decided to go to Japan to learn the Japanese garden tradition first hand as an apprentice in a garden maintenance company near Tokyo. She loves the rough texture of natural materials, the boldness of stone arrangements and dry landscape gardens.

“We love Japanese Gardens. And we want the world to know more about Real Japanese gardens.”