Home & Garden Gardening

About Garden Lighting Plans

    Accentuate

    • Begin your lighting plans with a simple sketch of your garden area, placing the larger components in first, like waterfalls, benches, statues and special trees. Accentuate these features with spotlights, up lights, down lights to create silhouettes, shadows and flowing water that sparkles. Your walkways, patio or deck, and the back of your home should also be included in this initial lighting plan.

    Coverage

    • Fill in your lighting plans with shrubbery sections, wooded areas and landscaped areas. Spread the solar landscape lighting around the perimeter of the wooded and shrubbery areas, and place them closer together to highlight your flowers and other landscaping. Add a post light to your lighting plan standing in the midst of your flowers or alone in your grass to draw attention to an area with little landscaping.

    Transition

    • Tying the accentuated areas together with the low-lying, coverage lighting is where your garden lighting plan comes together. Transition from shrubbery coverage to silhouetted trees gradually so that the lights compliment each other without creating a spotlighted area unnecessarily. Planning your garden lighting design with a combination of low and medium voltage lights will also help transition from lighter areas to more subtle, softer lit areas.

    Security

    • Garden lighting plans do more than accent your favorite statue or create interesting shadows among the trees, they also offer security. Lighting your garden walkway can help prevent accidents, and motion-triggered security spotlights can help deter intruders. Consider all of the possible ways you can light well-traveled areas with either subdued light flowing from a nearby set of shrubbery, or by lining your path with solar landscape lights. Floodlights will showcase your home in a way that will cause a burglar to seriously reconsider his intentions.

    Benefits

    • Garden lighting plans that incorporate several different types of lights and varying voltages offer effects that can seem mystical and serene. Whether you enjoy your lit garden from the inside of your home or by sitting amid the shadows created by well placed up lights, the benefits of your design will be illuminated for years to come.

SHARE
RELATED POSTS on "Home & Garden"
How to Tell if It Is a Banana Spider
How to Tell if It Is a Banana Spider
Constructing Your Own Outdoor Fireplace Made Easy
Constructing Your Own Outdoor Fireplace Made Easy
Kitchen Gardening During Drought
Kitchen Gardening During Drought
Tips For Planting a Herb Garden
Tips For Planting a Herb Garden
Why Choose Sandstone Tiles
Why Choose Sandstone Tiles
How to Find Out a Prank Caller's Number
How to Find Out a Prank Caller's Number
How and When to Harvest Snap Beans
How and When to Harvest Snap Beans
Building a Raised Bed
Building a Raised Bed
Why Build A Koi Pond With Concrete?
Why Build A Koi Pond With Concrete?
Epson Salts As a Fertilizer
Epson Salts As a Fertilizer
A Guide to Garden Features
A Guide to Garden Features
Follow the Artistic Element of Lines in Your Miniature Garden
Follow the Artistic Element of Lines in Your Miniature Garden
My Conifers Are Dying
My Conifers Are Dying
Looking At Different Light Sources For Growing Orchids Indoors
Looking At Different Light Sources For Growing Orchids Indoors
Aquaponics Tanks: For Healthy Fish and Vegetables
Aquaponics Tanks: For Healthy Fish and Vegetables
How to Train a Climber Or Wall Shrub on Wires
How to Train a Climber Or Wall Shrub on Wires
How to Use Miracle Gro After the Rain
How to Use Miracle Gro After the Rain
Got a New Bonsai?
Got a New Bonsai?
Great Ways to Improve Your Curb Appeal
Great Ways to Improve Your Curb Appeal
What Can You Put in a Worm Farm?
What Can You Put in a Worm Farm?

Leave Your Reply

*