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The benefits of garden eye candy

Observing garden 'eye candy' teaches us about design elements that make a difference in our own landscape.

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Courtesy of Donna Williamson
Mirrors extend this planting of annuals at Longwood Garden in Pennsylvania. It's an idea that the home gardener could use.
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Courtesy of Donna Williamson
A great pot with water spilling out is a terrific focal point for an annual planting that can be switched out when the plants grow past their prime.

It鈥檚 hard for me to believe I am saying this, but I want to make a case for 鈥済arden eye-candy.鈥 Those glossy, beautiful books, usually British, that show us photo after photo of gorgeous garden scenes are generally referred to as 鈥済arden porn鈥 or 鈥渆ye candy.鈥 But for most聽 of us in the US -- such as the state in which I live, Virginia -- most of the plants in these books' beautiful photos don鈥檛 bloom at the same time because of different climates.

While I eagerly tell the participants in my classes that it鈥檚 fun to look at those pictures and borrow ideas, I think there is even a bigger benefit.

Learn to appreciate the best

When we go to a museum, we don鈥檛 look at mediocre Impressionist art. We look at great art. We look at the capture of exquisite light or the waves of grain in a Van Gogh or a ballerina preparing to dance, and we are enchanted. This is an artist at the top of his or her game.

Some artists appeal to me more than others. Cezanne may be your favorite, while a friend's may be Manet, and mine may be . Taste and choice don鈥檛 matter as much as the education of our eyes and minds in what first-rate work looks like.

That same educated eye can be brought to the landscape.

What you learn

By reading and looking at the enormous variety of books with stunning and delicious photos, we can teach our eyes (and mind) about first-class gardens. By visiting great gardens (and the not-so-great) we can learn about how to use the dimensions of time and space with more flair.

The style may not suit you or your property, but attention to form, rhythm, mass, contrast, harmony, shape, etc., will prevail.

We have many public gardens that have received loving care and great resources. Sometimes they inspire; sometimes they fail. But having seen so many can help the observer understand and tuck away the details of success and the elements of failure to apply or avoid in their own gardens. The same is true with private gardens featured on tours.

聽Even though we are unlikely to install or have enough serfs to maintain elaborate topiary, we can observe and learn.

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Donna Williamson is one of more than a dozen professional garden writers who blog regularly at Diggin' It. She's a master gardener, garden designer, and garden coach. She has taught gardening and design classes at the State Arboretum of Virginia, Oatlands in Leesburg, and Shenandoah University. She鈥檚 also the founder and editor of Grandiflora Mid-Atlantic Gardening magazine, and the author of 鈥淭he Virginia Gardener鈥檚 Companion: An Insider鈥檚 Guide to Low Maintenance Gardening in Virginia.鈥 She lives in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. To read more by Donna, click here.

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