Gardentopia Design basics for creating beautiful outdoor spaces

Jan Johnsen

Book - 2019

Any backyard has the potential to refresh and inspire if you know what to do. Jan Johnsen's new book, Gardentopia: Design Basics for Creating Beautiful Outdoor Spaces, will delight all garden lovers with over 130 lushly illustrated landscape design and planting suggestions. Ms. Johnsen is an admired designer and popular speaker whose hands-on approach to "co-creating with nature" will have you saying, "I can do that!'This info-packed, sumptuous book offers individual tips for enhancing any size landscape using 'real world' solutions. The suggestions are grouped into five categories that include Garden Design and Artful Accents, Walls, Patios, and Steps and Plants and Planting, among others. Whether you are... an experienced gardener or a landscaping novice, Gardentopia will inspire you with tips such as 'Soften a Corner", "Paint it Black", and "Hide and Reveal". --

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2nd Floor 712.6/Johnsen Due May 16, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : The Countryman Press, A division of W. W. Norton & Company [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Jan Johnsen (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
286 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781682683965
  • Introduction
  • 1. Garden Design And Artful Accents
  • 1. Visualization 101
  • 2. What's the Goal?
  • 3. The Sum Is More Than Its Parts
  • 4. The Graceful Sweep of a Curve
  • 5. Hide and Reveal The Mystery of the Unseen
  • 6. The Principle of Three Depths
  • 7. Find the Power Spot
  • 8. Framing a Garden
  • 9. Blend Light and Shadow
  • 10. Have a Seal Adirondack Chairs
  • 11. East-Direction of Growth and Renewal
  • 12. Respect the Genius of the Place
  • 13. Capture the View Beyond
  • 14. Mushrooms and Staddle Stones
  • 15. Power of the Portal
  • 16. Soften a Corner
  • 17. Watch Our for Runway Lights
  • 18. Re-Re-Repetition in the Landscape
  • 19. A Window in the Garden
  • 20. Rustic Elegance in a Wooded Landscape
  • 21. Irresistible Lookouts
  • 22. Show Off That Rock!
  • 23. Planter in a Bed
  • 24. Tricking the Eye
  • 25. Reclaim an Old Metal Gate
  • 26. Why We Love Rounded Forms in the Garden
  • 27. The Intriguing Dry Stream
  • 28. Yin and Yang in the Garden
  • 29. Accessorizing Your Garden with Pot Feet
  • 30. The Long View
  • 31. Exolamation Points Columnar Plants, Pillars, and Poles
  • 32. Placing a Water Cascade Elevate and Set Back
  • 33. Circles in the Landscape
  • 34. Rain Chains
  • 35. The Lure of the Sheltered Carrier
  • 36. Artful Accents-Where in Place Them?
  • 37. Pooling and Channeling
  • 38. Move the Furniture
  • 39. Have Fun with Stones
  • 40. Garden Making Advice From a Zen Master
  • 2. Walls, Patios, Walks, And Steps
  • 41. How Big a Patio Do You Needs?
  • 42. Make the Steps the Show
  • 43. The 3. 4. 5 Rate For 90-Degree Corners
  • 44. A Raised Walkway for Soggy Ground
  • 45. Edging Makes the Different
  • 46. Meet and Greet
  • 47. Rounded Steps
  • 48. Planking Pattern A Modern Touch
  • 49. Punctuate with a Brick Border
  • 50. Cedar Log Steps
  • 51. Enhance the Public Face of Your House
  • 52. Outdoor Steps-Wider and Lower
  • 53. Cap That Wall
  • 54. Why We Love Niches
  • 55. Setting Stepping Stones
  • 56. Make Mine Herringbone
  • 57. A Connoisseur of Stone Walls
  • 3. Theme Gardens
  • 58. Cupid's Garden
  • 59. Remember the Pollinators
  • 60. A Stroll Garden
  • 61. A Rock Crevice Garden
  • 62. More Kitchen Gardens, Please
  • 63. Hydrangea Madness
  • 64. Whimsy? Why Not?
  • 65. Late the Moonlight
  • 66. Food for the Nose
  • 67. A Garden of the Five Senses
  • 68. Celebrate the Rocks
  • 69. Birdscaping with Berried Plants
  • 70. Medicinal Garden, Anyone?
  • 71. Tropical Splash
  • 72. Ferny Woodland
  • 73. A Cottage Garden
  • 74. A Garden for a Small Space
  • 75. Everyday "Art" in the Garden
  • 4. Color In The Garden
  • 76. Try Some Yellow and Call Me in the Morning
  • 77. Why White?
  • 78. In Love with Orange
  • 79. A Matter of Sunlight
  • 80. A Pop of Red
  • 81. One-Color Gardens and Planters
  • 82. Inventive and Creative Green
  • 83. See the Basics
  • 84. The Mystery of a Blue Gate
  • 85. Pink and Purple A Dynamic Duo
  • 86. The Sound of Flowers
  • 87. Match That Loaf!
  • 88. Burnished Colors of Late Autumn
  • 89. Accent on White and Green
  • 90. The Siren Call of Bhie Evergreens
  • 91. Vibrant Display Ideas for Fall
  • 92. Playing with Colors
  • 93. Paint it Black
  • 5. Plants And Planting
  • 94. Why We Garden
  • 95. Bottlebrush Buckeye
  • 96. A Foliage Tapestry
  • 97. Russian Sage Plays Well with Others
  • 98. Cool Season versus Warm Season Grasses
  • 99. Butterfly Weed-So Important
  • 100. Rosette Patterns Grab the Eye
  • 101. The Lovely Smokebush
  • 102. The Life of the World
  • 103. Stepped Hedges for a Sloping Site
  • 104. Lamb's Ear-Beautiful and Useful
  • 105. The Gift of the Gardenia
  • 106. Cloud Pruning
  • 107. Snowflake Oakleaf Hydrangea
  • 108. A Lot of a Little
  • 109. Embrace the Moss
  • 110. Plants in the Front Row
  • 111. The Purple Persian Shield
  • 112. Lifting the Canopy
  • 113. Tall Verbena-An Airy Nonstop Bloomer
  • 114. Fine Textures for Fine Gardens
  • 115. The Sunflower The Fourth Sister
  • 116. Sunlight Therapy
  • 117. Mix and Match Sedum
  • 118. Playful Mounds
  • 119. In Praise of Coleus
  • 120. Planting by the Moon
  • 121. Anchors in the Landscape
  • 122. Tiger Eyes® Cutleaf Staghorn Sumac
  • 123. Love Your Slope
  • 124. Dragon's Eye Pine
  • 125. Angelina Stonecrop-A Garden Workhorse
  • 126. It's All About the Soil
  • 127. Versatile Ornamental Onion
  • 128. Go for the Bark
  • 129. The Delicate Beauty of the Laceleaf Japanese Maple
  • 130. Feathery Celosia
  • 131. A Shape, a Volume, an Arabesque
  • 132. A Sparkling Groundcover-'Beacon Silver' Dead Nettle
  • 133. Light as Air-Spider Flower
  • 134. 'Mellow Yellow' Spirea
  • 135. Ligularia 'Britt-Marie Grawford'
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This is foremost a photo library of garden-design ideas for the browsing reader, as it should be. But Johnsen adds value through smart organization, spot-on pairings of images with the design concepts she's trying to convey, conversational but info-packed captions running 150-200 words, and a good, wide range of possibilities for gardeners to consider. For example, the chapter on theme gardens includes examples of pollinator, rock crevice, strolling, kitchen, scent, birdscaping, medicinal, and fern gardens. And the chapter on walls, patios, walks, and steps is chock-full of photos with accompanying captions of projects, many of which even the average home gardener can pull off. Johnsen admits that the landscapes shown here are primarily from the northeastern U.S., but she helpfully indicates hardiness zones, which extend beyond her territory, for many of the plants she recommends. And, for browsers, there's a nice catchall section touching on such accents as Adirondack chairs, runway lights, pillars and poles, the principle of three depths in a garden, rustic furniture, the placement of planters in beds, and the use of portals. And an entire chapter plays with color in the garden, from the almost garish pinks and reds of coneflowers to the snowy whites of tulips, dogwoods, and anemones. Inspiring.--Alan Moores Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Readers with even the slightest interest in beautifying an outdoor space-large or small-should find something of value in this expansive guide from landscape designer Johnsen (The Spirit of Stone: 101 Practical & Creative Stonescaping Ideas for Your Garden). She emphasizes the importance of deciding upon a goal for a garden and visualizing its final appearance before beginning work on it, declaring that the sum of any such project is greater than its parts. Johnsen takes care to dissect these parts, revealing creative possibilities (accompanied by practical guidance) for each nook and cranny. For example, to recover the lost art of "garden strolling," the design can include a widened, curving walkway that coaxes the stroller through a garden's various turns and twists. With proper planning and plant placement, the garden will "reveal itself in stages, hiding and offering up its delights in turn." Cedar steps on a wooded hillside can function similarly, offering an insect-resistant feature that helps set the pace of traversing the garden. Replete with eye-popping color photos, detailed explanations, lists of the tools required, and creative ideas, Johnsen's guide will be, for avid and committed gardeners, a gift that keeps on giving. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved