Within the past month, minding my own business, living in middle rural Georgia, 2 local women, they don't know each other, hired me. One of the women found me on Houzz, the other thru her builder.
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Both women, and their spouses, have targeted specialty careers, heavy with international travel. Heavy, for decades. Both women hired me with strong intent. A French garden. Not an American version of French gardens, French.
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Attention to detail inside their homes, not French inspired, French. Neither woman has hesitated to fill a container, while in France thru the years, and ship it home.
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At one of those gardens, before getting out of my service van at the first visit, I knew faux geometry would be used with major hedges, allees, axis. Ironic, much can be manipulated, but the property lines, and roads, cannot. Enter, faux geometry.
Pic, above, here.
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At the front end of faux geometry, especially if you've never heard of it, the concept feels 'wrong'. Faux geometry is not taught in school, nor have I heard it mentioned at any seminar/class/article. Faux geometry was learned, on-the-job. Once learned, it's a sense of magic.
Pic, above, here.
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Collateral to faux geometry is a lecture attended decades ago, Sir Roy Strong, and his wife, came to Atlanta. His garden, The Laskett, has since been bequeathed after he's gone, to live in perpetuity as a public garden. Of course you can guess my cat's name? Laskett. Even Laskett's new vet, moving rural 2 years ago, asked about Laskett's name. And the vet is from Scotland, educated in England.
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At that lecture, all these decades later, I still hear Sir Roy Strong say, "If you have an irregularly spaced area, put a geometric shape in it." Game changing sentence. Faux geometry I had to learn on my own.
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In the renderings, above/below, there are geometric garden rooms, within irregular spaces, and further, faux geometry within several of the geometric garden rooms. Staying with this? Got it?
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Garden Design with pixie dust. A pair of arrows for your quiver.
Pic, above, here.
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Once my pair of 'French' ladies have their gardens installed, I'll match-make them.
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Renderings, above, created by French garden designer, Dominique Lafourcade.
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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Not my job to tell you how to dig a planting hole, my job is telling you where. More, if you truly want to know how to design your garden, geometry and faux geometry are a pair of major keys to that realm.
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ReplyDeleteI'd forgotten "faux geometry" since I learned a term like that in 1985 in college, and it really works in the large scales you show or smaller scales. A few good designers and architects carry it out to success, as those into only "curvilinear forms" and "naturalistic" or unkempt mock them.
ReplyDeleteSomething to chew as usual in your posts. Good luck with your 2 new clients.