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Article Title: Get Tied Up With A knot Garden
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: 
Word Count: 679
Keywords: Knot Garden Design, parterre gardens, french landscaping
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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In a knot garden, low-growth plants intertwine in intricate patterns that 
resemble embroidered stitch work or knots.  They were developed during the 
English Renaissance at the time of Queen Elizabeth I and William Shakespeare.  
It was popular to adorn garments of that time with intricately woven 
embroidery.  Knot gardens of this time period reflected both formality and 
elegance.  They were almost always shaped like perfect squares, and they were 
planted with a rich diversity of herbs and flowers.  The use of specific plants 
and patterns to symbolize deeper meanings has always been common in the knot 
garden, and in its French derivative, the parterre garden.  

Because knot gardens were originally meant to be enjoyed from a ground-level 
perspective, gardeners did not use traditional hedges to define their borders.  
Square portions of land were parceled off and marked for planting with gravel 
or sand.  Gardeners would then begin by planting whichever herbs or flowers 
would grow most slowly.  These species were intentionally placed very close 
together so they would intertwine as they grew larger; creating the knotted 
appearance the garden is named for.  Faster growing herb and flower species 
appropriate to the tastes of the landowner and the aesthetic of the estate 
would then be added.   Both slow-growth and fast growth vegetation required 
constant water and trimming in order to maintain color, form, and desired 
height.    

Almost any kind of herb or flower may have been found in a knot garden of this 
time, so long as it looked attractive and proportional to the design, and so 
long as it contributed a fragrant aroma to its general surroundings.  It was 
not uncommon to mix medicinal and culinary herbs used for folk remedies and 
spices with floral species renowned for color and intricate form.  In almost 
every case as well, English knot gardens would be landscaped with access points 
that would let people to stroll only inches away from the heavy concentrations 
of lush and fragrant vegetation.  

Although knot gardens, as all things do, have changed somewhat over the 
centuries, it is remarkable that the basic concepts of low-level growth, strong 
fragrant smells, and diverse coloration have remained relatively unchanged.  
The form has not been abandoned; but rather, expanded.  The insistence on 
perfectly proportional geometry was an aesthetic absolute in the Renaissance 
that harkened back to the linearity and perfect proportions of Greek and Roman 
art.  Today, we live in a much more subjective and relativistic age where 
absolutes are questioned.   A knot garden, like any other form of art in 
today's society, may be used to ask a question instead of giving and answer.  
It may also function more as a complimentary element in a landscape than a 
primary element.   

Knot gardens are often rectangular in design, providing organic linear 
compliments to stone walls.  They are also very popular to plant as surrounding 
elements around statuary and fountains.  In these instances, absolute form 
gives way to form that follows function and form that connects with other form. 
 This is particularly true when knot gardens are planted around abstract 
sculptures.  Such works of art often benefit more from combination of 
alternating circular, square, and rectangular trainings than they would from 
the traditional form of the perfect square.  Fountains can be better 
accentuated-particularly when lighted at night-by a starred pattern, spiral, or 
circular pattern of greenery and color.

For these and other avant-garde designs, it may also be better to create 
designs using exotic and non-traditional ground cover species, as well as 
hedges comprised of boxwoods that designs that better reflect the 
Existentialism of our era versus the Deism and Theism of the Renaissance.  

Ultimately, the degree to which a knot garden conforms to the purist standards 
of its historical origins or deviates into the uncharted waters of pure 
subjectivity depends largely on the mindset, tastes, and preferences of the 
homeowner and the ultimate aesthetic desired for the landscape in general.

Jeff Halper has a passion for landscaping and landscape design, for more 
information about landscaping and gardening visit http://www.exteriorworlds.com
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