Showing posts with label oriental garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oriental garden. Show all posts

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Asian Zen Garden with Kwan Yin Statuary Decorating Ideas at The Crabby Nook

Found this suggestion on HGTV for Asian Garden Decor...


http://www.hgtv.com/designers-portfolio/room/asian/outdoors/13032/index.html#/id-11122/style-asian/room-outdoors

We recently made this design at The Crabby Nook...

This features our Kwan Yin bust garden statue handcrafted in fiber stone. Fiber stone is lightweight and more durable than concrete.  We currently carry this statuary in three finishes:  Pompeii, White Moss and Sandstone.  It measures 14" Length x 13" Width x 22" Height.  




See this Kwan Yin at:

http://www.thecrabbynook.com/kwan-yin-bust-garden-statuary-yard-art-statue/





Saturday, June 1, 2013

Landscaping with Feng Shui

LANDSCAPING with FENG SHUI 


Feng Shui is the study of the "built" environment and while feng shui does look at the larger environment surrounding the structure, there are no hard and fast rules about the landscaping. Feng Shui is primarily focused on the Qi within a structure, as that is what has the most direct effect on the people. When it comes to the outside environment, the main points of concern is that the landscaping is beautiful and in balance with the rest of the environment. Living in a beautiful environment is much more supportive than living in an environment that is an eyesore. You can tell the Qi of a neighborhood or area by how green and glossy the trees and plants are.

Some general rules:

Pathways should flow like a meandering stream not a straight road. As to trees, they are fine as long as they are not placed in a direct line with any entrances, especially the main entrance. Try to keep a balance of yin and yang (dark and light) when thinking of the trees. Avoid trees that will completely block the light. Too much of anything is not good. Again, balance is the key.
Shrubbery is okay as long as it is kept neat and prevented from overgrowing. Trees and shrubbery can be used to block harsh Qi such as strong winds. Grass does not pose any problems. Strive for beauty.
Flowers and other colorful plants can be used as long as they fit within the environment and follow the rules of the 5 elements .
"Wood produces fire, fire produces earth, earth produces metal, metal produces water, water produces wood."  Wood is green, fire is red, earth is tans or yellows, metal is white or gold, water is blue or black. Avoid using them in a destructive combination such that "wood uproots earth, earth blocks water, water douses fire, fire melts metal, and metal chops wood".
Consider the direction the building "sits." For example if the building faces to the North and sits to the South, than this is a Li building (Li is the Fire trigram). This house would be supported by a lot of red flowers, but would not benefit from blue or black colors. A house that sits to the west and faces east (Tui is a metal trigram) would benefit from white and gold flowers. Reds and purples should be avoided. This can also apply to the color of the house trim as well. These are all general rules and while their effect can be minimal on the house itself, following the rules of balance can support the house and its occupants.
The two items that need to be looked at carefully are rocks and water. Since they are both part of the five elements and are used to remedy certain situations in the greater environment, they need to be placed very carefully.
Water in the west is not good, while in the southwest and east it can assist prosperity, during this time period. These directions should not be in front of, or behind the house or building. If they are, it takes a qualified practitioner to determine if the water will have a positive or negative effect. If you are striving for the effect of the water element, then it is better to not use an earthen container such as a fountain made of rocks since earth blocks water in the cycle of the elements. Metallic containers work well as metal strengthens water. Many people use metal troughs effectively with beautiful plants and flowers planted around it to blend it with the environment. Ponds and pools can be used if placed under the guidance of a trained Feng Shui practitioner.
The same can be said of rocks, especially large decorative rocks. Because these are used in certain situations to correct for a problem, they need to be placed under the guidance of a Feng Shui practitioner. Placed haphazardly, they could have an adverse effect on the prosperity of the building if used in front of or in back of the structure. This takes a qualified Feng Shui practitioner to determine if the placement of these elements is needed or not. Feng Shui folklore states that a building should have a mountain behind it to support it. By using rocks and earth, you can create this mountain. While this sounds good, this is not true in every case. Each building is unique and needs to be looked at on a case by case basis.
To summarize, plants and other "wood" elements are fine anywhere as long as they do not block the Qi of the building and are used in balance. Colors can be used to assist the home as long as they fall within the rules of the five elements. Water and Rocks need to be placed under the advice of a trained practitioner to avoid adversely effecting the people or the prosperity. When placed correctly, they can have a very supportive effect on the building or house. All in all, the goal of Feng Shui is to create a comfortable and beautiful environment for the people. Strive for this when landscaping.


Monday, May 27, 2013

Oriental Gardens with Feng Shui Design


ORIENTAL GARDENS with Feng Shui


How you arrange all the things in your garden is key to creating an oasis, and not a jungle. Feng Shui is the classic Chinese art of arranging furniture and possessions to help you find ways to live more harmoniously in your environment. To the Chinese, Chi, the natural life-force, can be out of balance if spaces are not inviting and tranquil. Adherents believe that how you set up your home, work space and garden will influence every aspect of your life: your emotional and physical well-being, your career, even your love life. Whether or not you believe that, if you apply the principles of Feng Shui to your yard and garden, you will transform the area around your house into an oasis for you and your family. Those principles are the basics of smart and natural garden design that will make every garden more attractive and pleasing to be in.

I see Feng Shui landscape designing, as another way of bringing balance for your personal enhancement. Working with the earth brings the qualities of earth to you. The basic element of earth is healing, regenerative,and without any effort at all, you recieve these benefits. It is a way of bringing forth a balance of the yin and yang, light and darkness are balanced by using different elements: water, earth,fire (example: pointy leaves of plants represent this element) rocks, wood element (trees), metals (flower pots, wind chimes or a metal bench to sit and reflect the days events. When you take these elements and use the bagua-the map of Feng Shui, you are able to draw beneficial energy to you and your home.

A way to apply the Feng Shui philosophy to your garden is starting at the entrance. An arbor, for example, makes clear to people where to come in and makes the garden inviting." Ideally," the entrance faces south -- the direction, by the way, where your garden will get maximum sun exposure. A closed gate would be less inviting for people and energy, and it might shade some of your plants. Though there are no particular Feng Shui plants, Colors have a strong impact on energy flow, just as they have been shown to influence our moods. Hot colors, like red and yellow flowers, lift up your energy level when you're looking at them. The cooler-colored purple and white flowers are more soothing.

Remember, Feng Shui emphasizes diversity. The five elements you want to have represented in your garden are wood, metal, earth, fire and waterWater, be it a fountain or pond or bird bath, is very soothing. By the way, attracting the birds is the best, most natural form of bug control, because they eat pest insects.

The compass directions have corresponding colors to help create your balanced landscaping. When you involve the elements and colors of the bagua map, it creates the a good energy-chi and it is carried into your home to help empower you and your family. The balance of inside/outside Feng Shui will give you the extra boost it takes to live your life in harmony and balance. You will also realize that once you create this harmony, more birds, butterflies, praying mantis will arrive on the scene to share and add to this energized area. You will also find this area to be one that attracts the human race to your area.

If you don't have enough space for a birdbath, there are other ways to incorporate water into a garden. A simple electric fountain would do. Just add water and the electric pump would recycle it.

DESIGNING YOUR FENG SHUI GARDEN

Landscape design is not just a matter of putting up a building, planting trees and flowers, or building an artificial mountain. It is a means of revealing one's attitude of life by displaying landscape esthetically. Landscape needs to be restrained, gentle, and understated. We should modestly hide, not boldly dominate as is fashionable in the West. This enables a more intimate experience and sense of fitting into the environment.

The Chinese way of thinking follows a clear path:

  • Respect experiences.
  • Discern the truth by studying the past.
  • Stand between science and theology.
  • Combine ethics with esthetics.
  • In Chinese history no special ideal or religion controls spiritual life — real life comes before anything else. Chinese respect nature and self-knowing, and people adapt into a natural world more easily.
A Chinese will search for compromise while a Westerner wants a Yes or No answer. This constitutes fundamentally different approaches to landscape design.

In Western thought we oscillate between total belief in a Creator (ignoring real life) or a full belief in human power to explore and dominate the world (which in many respects also ignores real life). Westerners measure their world in human dimensions, with the formal garden recognized as a symbol of human power and achievement. Humans in Western thought are conquerors and improvers of nature, so people want a walled-in and controlled copy of Paradise (perfection beyond real life).

By enabling and worshipping human power, we lose our fear of wildness. We conquer nature, sanitize and "improve" it. And these ideas are intrinsically Western, coming as they do from Plato and Christian theology.

There is an attitude of profit regarding land in the West. The practical and utilitarian trend is Western, which historically was restricted in the East. In the East the attitude encompasses humility and respect for the forces of nature and heaven.

It is very rare in Chinese design history to place geometrical forms on hilly land, as is common in Western countries. Only in the Chinese Emperor's gardens were geometric forms acceptable, because for Chinese they are symbols of respect for natural forces (heaven and earth).

You will find nothing about improvement of the land, no modification of perceived imperfections or a need to control or dominate the landscape. Even the Son of Heaven would not assume he had the authority to do such a thing.

The four landscape elements are:

  • Mountain
  • Water
  • Plant
  • Building

Yin and Yang in the landscape consist of:

  • Stillness and movement
  • Unity and variety
  • Locality and generality
  • Scenery and subjective reactions

Practical Application

Feng Shui patios and gardens are closer in spirit to rock, English or low-maintenance gardens than to formal, artificial and overdesigned European gardens, which are characterized by unnatural features such as severe corners, angles and straight lines.

Whether you live in a condo or a mansion, whether you are positioning a potted plant on your patio or having many acres professionally landscaped, putting everything in its right place according to feng shui principles will help create a healing, harmonious and natural environment.

In designing your outdoor space, be mindful of the three basic concepts of Feng Shui:

  • Energy flow (wavy or curvy is beneficial; straight lines are negative)
  • Balance of yin (dark, soft, passive) and yang (light, hard, active)
  • Generative and destructive relationships of the five elements: wood, fire, earth, metal and water.


Here's how to apply basic Feng Shui principles in your spot of earth.

Stand in the center of your outdoor space.

Use a compass to determine the eight directions.

NorthCreativity, Personal growth, New ideas, Inspiration, Prospects, Career, Music, Art
  • Use: Water elements 
  • Good place for: Metal toolsheds, ponds, Jacuzzis
  • Shapes: Waves & curves
  • Avoid: Stone, clay, earth.


Northeast Knowledge, Wisdom, Meditation/reading, Inner journeys, Spiritual and intellectual growth, Nature
  • Use: Earth element 
  • Good place for: Stone benches, rock gardens, repairing equipment, stones and boulders, statutary, brick, flagstone, anything made from the earth  
  • Shapes: Low and flat surfaces
  • Avoid: Plants and trees.


EastNew life and growth, Rebirth and rejuvenation, Harmony, Health, Family life, Nutrition, Healing
  • Use: Wood element
  • Good place for: Fruit trees, herbs, medicinal plants, play equipment, sauna, tai chi and other exercises, trees, plants
  • Shapes: Columns, cylinders 
  • Avoid: Metal garden accessories, patio furniture, tools, white flowers


Southeast Wealth, Abundance, Material possessions, Communication
  • Use: Wood element
  • Good place for: Cultivation and display of show plants, flowers or fish 
  • Shapes: Cylinders, posts and columns
  • Avoid: Metal garden accessories, patio furniture and tools, white flowers.


SouthOpportunity, Dreams, Aspirations, Awards, Fame, Achievement, Happiness, Longevity, Festivity
  • Use: Fire element
  • Good place for: Barbecues, fire pits, burning leaves, trees, flowers
  • Shapes: Pointed and triangular shapes
  • Avoid: Water elements such as ponds, waterfalls, and fountains.


Southwest Marriage, Romance, Motherhood, Love, Relationships, Partners
  • Use: Earth element
  • Good place for: Seating/dining for two, team sports 
  • Shapes: Low, flat surfaces
  • Avoid: Wood patio or deck furniture, gazebos, fences and gates, the color green.

West Children, Creativity, Harvest, Socializing and entertaining

  • Use: Metal element
  • Good place for: Outdoor entertaining, bar, children's playground/garden, convalescing and healing, sunbathing
  • Shapes: Circles and arches.


NorthwestTrade, Interests outside of home, International travel, Fatherhood, Mentors and benefactors, Helpful people, Supporters
  • Use: Metal element
  • Good place for: Statues of deities, angels, cherubs, animals, wind chimes, sounds 
  • Shapes: Circles and arches
  • Avoid: Barbecues, fire pit, pyramid, red flowers.
  • Avoid: Barbecues, fire pit, pyramid, red flowers.