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Japanese Garden: Types, How To Design And More

How to design a beautiful Japanese garden?

The simplicity and serenity of Japanese gardens make them ideal settings for contemplation and relaxation. Consisting largely of evergreens, rocks, pebbles, sand, ponds, and waterfalls, they put the opulence of many Western garden designs to shame. In most cases, the garden’s architecture is spare and unadorned, preferring to let the garden’s natural setting take centre stage. The gardens include weathered and natural features and employ bold colours to depict the changing seasons.

Japanese garden designs often include plants and weathered, aged items to evoke a sense of the natural world and to reflect on the transience of life and the relentless march of time. In the past, Japanese art served as an inspiration for landscape architects. Many gardens also have pebbles and sometimes even gravel, in addition to water. Despite the fact that Japan is home to many beautiful flowering plants, herbaceous flowers play a much smaller role in Japanese gardens than they do in Western gardens. However, flowering shrubs and trees play an important role, especially since they stand out so dramatically against the typically dominant greenery.

See also: What are the medicinal benefits of Camellia Japonica aka Japanese Camellia?

 

Japanese garden: Elements

Careful compositions of two, three, five, or seven rocks are used, with the most typical composition size being three. Humanity stands as the connecting link between the two larger rocks, which often symbolise heaven and earth, respectively. Some pebbles, known as suteishi (which literally means “nameless” or “discarded”), are strategically put in what seem to be random positions around the garden.

 

Japanese garden: Types

There are many different types of Japanese gardens.

Tea garden

The garden serves as a vital tool for easing the minds of visitors. As they make their way from the garden’s entrance to the tea room, attendees engage in a series of rituals designed to get them in the appropriate frame of mind for the next ceremony.

 

Source: Pinterest

 

Study garden

Most traditional study gardens have lanterns, often of the Kasuga style (Toro). The lights in question are supported by a single column. The enormous umbrella works well as a snow cape, catching the falling snow and presenting it as a fluffy white headpiece to anybody who cares to look.

 

Source: Pinterest

 

Strolling garden

Historical and fantastical settings from China and Japan are both often re-created in this kind of Japanese garden. These daimyo gardens were works of art that demonstrated the owner’s cultural sophistication and material success.

 

Source: Pinterest

 

Dry landscape garden

The water that characterises all other types of Japanese gardens is absent in dry landscape gardens. Gravel stands in for water to create the illusion of a dry river or ocean. The vacant space between stone groups in a dry landscape garden is a more true reflection of the competence of the designer than the stone arrangements themselves.

 

Source: Pinterest

 

Courtyard garden

Gardens in the interior courtyards of larger homes were important for more than just aesthetic reasons as a means of controlling the home’s temperature and ventilation during the long, hot summers. This was an area where several sorts of water elements, common in Japanese gardens, really shone.

 

Source: Pinterest

 

Japanese garden: Principles

 

FAQs

How do you refer to a Japanese garden?

Some people call dry landscape gardens Zen gardens, although the correct term is karesansui. In Japan, Zen monasteries like Kyoto's world-famous Ryoan-ji have these kinds of gardens as part of their grounds.

What exactly is the idea behind a Japanese garden?

The gardens are often minimalist, including just evergreens, rocks, pebbles, sand, ponds, and waterfalls, eschewing the ornate flourishes that are common in many Western garden designs.

Which three things make up a Japanese garden?

Stone, which forms the framework of the landscape, water, which symbolises the life-giving power; and plants, which offer colour and change with the seasons, are the three basic materials utilised to make a Japanese garden.

Got any questions or point of view on our article? We would love to hear from you.

Write to our Editor-in-Chief Jhumur Ghosh at jhumur.ghosh1@housing.com

 

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