1. Determine Landscape Needs and Wants
Make a list of needs and wants. Do your kids need a play space? Do you want to grow vegetables? Would your family enjoy gathering on a patio? Do some very rough sketches of the yard with thoughts of where you want to place things; it’s a great organizing principle for landscape design for beginners. They don’t need to be master plans (they can just be ideas), according to Marianne Lipanovich, author of the Big Book of Garden Designs. Her sketch for her front yard landscape design overhaul was just a few lines and a couple of circles. You can easily play around with ideas without a lot of time and commitment.
2. Think About Location
Study the sun and wind patterns. You might want to place a patio on the west side of the house, but it will get lots of afternoon sun, which means dinnertime in August could be unpleasantly hot. And wind whistling around a corner will quickly extinguish a fire pit. Those are common mistakes in backyard landscape design for beginners. Your design should take into account what the sun and wind do at different times of the day and year.
3. Spend Time in Your Landscape
Coming to quick conclusions about your yard can lead to choices that don’t work in the long term. Live with it for a while before making any changes. After spending more time outdoors, you’ll start to see areas where you want to go and sit that you wouldn’t have thought of at first, Lipanovich says.
4. Start Small
Sure, complete outdoor makeovers can happen in just three days on your favorite home and garden show, but they have a huge crew to handle the heavy lifting, which is not a situation enjoyed by most beginner home gardeners. Part of creating a landscape you’ll love is slowly developing a plan and enjoying the process. From your master plan, start with a small flower bed. Go out and work on it for an hour or two when you have the time, and worry less about filling everything up right away. Lipanovich notes that when you take your time with your DIY landscape design, you’re less likely to get sloppy or resort to shortcuts you’ll regret later.
5. Find a Focal Point
Any good garden design has a focal point or series of focal points, and it’s an easy principle to put in place. That may be a sculpture or a stunning tree or a series of shrubs. Let the design draw your eyes around the landscape, Lipanovich says.
6. Focus on Scale and Pacing
It’s the trickiest principle in landscape design for beginners, but scale and pacing give your yard a pulled-together look. There will be variations in size, shape, and color, with tall plants against a building or in the back of a flowerbed, and paths that lead people through the space. Lipanovich emphasizes the importance of finding a good balance between repetition and new elements. Repetition gives a sense of cohesion, but you also don’t want it to be monotonous. An occasional new element is better than having all different elements throughout.
7. Be Open to Change
Unless you’re strongly devoted to something, be honest about what’s working for you and what’s not in your design. Even Lipanovich has found herself discovering elements she once liked that no longer reflect her style. It’s okay to experiment and edit as you go. Remember: Patience is key to landscape design for beginners. If all of that bare space is too much to look at, and the kids and dogs are tracking in mud, rely on temporary solutions, for example, plunking down some annuals, mulch, and fast-growing groundcovers, to cover an area while you’re figuring out what you want. Lipanovich also recommends using annuals and small perennials around larger plants that need time to grow and fill in. You can always dig them up and move them somewhere else if you realize they’re in the wrong spot later on.