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Gardens are more than plants. Stone walls, flowing water, and crunching gravel paths can turn a collection of plants into a garden room. Benches, boulders, trellises and flagstone patios further refine a garden, creating spaces where people and plants mix comfortably. An integral feature of successful garden rooms is lighting.
Garden lighting is both a technical subject, concerned with volts, watts, conduits and infrastructure, and an aesthetic subject, focusing on shapes, shadows, and mood. Janet Lennox Moyer, author of The Landscape Lighting Book and member of the faculty at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, spoke at the Chicago Botanic Garden about using light as a garden element:
Why light a garden?
Light creates a feeling in space, according to Ms. Moyer, as well as serving as a directional tool. It provides visual transportation in a garden from one area to another. Lighting can say "welcome" if the front entrance is lit or "not welcome" if the entrance is dark, even if the garden beds are lit. It can pull us into the garden, easing the isolation of winter's long hours of darkness. It can guide us toward what is most interesting in a landscape.
Guidelines for good light design
When deciding how to illuminate your yard or garden, keep the following guidelines in mind:
Careful lighting of a garden creates a nighttime space that adds a new dimension to a landscape. It draws your eye and thoughts into the garden. Gardeners often find that once lighting has been added to their gardens, they want a little bit more…and then a little bit more.