Garden Guy: April means foolish things like Trompe l’oeil
Sunday, April 13, 2025
By Bruce Bennett
This 2023 article generated more questions than all the other columns, combined, I wrote that year. I have been asked a number of times to republish it for gardeners who had not seen, or lost/tossed, the original article. This one has been expanded a bit. I am happy to get the little gray cells of the mind working and turning toward new gardening adventures……BB
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Photo by pixabay.com |
Trompe l’oeil is the French term for ‘fool the eye’ and is an artistic phrase used for the creation of optical illusions of three-dimensional space and objects on a two-dimensional surface, usually for indoor wall paintings.
While the term usually deals with paintings, gardeners can use several of the same techniques to make their three-dimensional green spaces appear larger than they are (and who wouldn’t like a larger back yard or garden?). Trompe l’oeil makes visitors question the boundary between an artificially created world and what actually exists.
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Photo by disneytouristblog.com |
This technique is probably most noticed by the largest number of people in this country when they gaze at Disneyland’s Cinderella’s Castle whose forced perspective (larger ground floor and smaller towers) makes the building look much taller than it really is.
“And, how does this increase the size of my garden?” you ask. Well, while you are not increasing the actual square footage of your yard, the same ‘smoke and mirrors’ techniques of trompe l’oeil allows you to create the appearance of more garden and a larger yard. Let’s discuss a few DIY examples to make real estate agents rethink your property value……..
Trompe L’oeil is all about illusion, subterfuge and fun. The technique involves using the laws of visual perspective to create an impression of depth on flat walls (like a mural) or in open 3D spaces. Sometimes the creation is intended as a joke, but not always.
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Photo by growsonyou.com |
The technique has been used on garden walls and fences to make gardens appear larger than they really are. The trellis is the most observed wall illusion that garden centers sell. The angles of the structure make it appear to be of greater depth than it is.
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Photo by thespruce.com |
This process creates a visual sense of increased distance between the viewer and the back border without costing more money than would have otherwise been spent on the gardening project.
Find the longest view line in the garden. The first thing you need to do to make a small garden look bigger is during the (re)design stage.
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Image by pixabaycom |
Most gardens are rectangles; those that are short and wide look even smaller. But… This is because we usually look straight into the back of the yard.
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Photo by richardrogersdesigns.com |
The diagonal is always longer than either of the sides of a rectangle, thus, increasing the greater sense of depth and space. Draw a simple map of your yard and draw the longest perspectives lines (AKA, lines of sight) you can achieve. You can lay out your garden so that attention is drawn to an object or setting at the end of these lines.
Place eye catching features at the end of the long view lines.
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Photo by Houzz.com |
You can direct visitors’ eyes to go where you want them to by placing a feature, plant or construct at the very end of the longest perspective lines you found. It is a simple way of tricking the eye.
When a new landscape is seen for the first time, visitors unconsciously search for something to fix their eyes on, something that stands out. You just need to provide it and place it as far away as possible – yes, to create the feel of distance. Use your imagination and choose something that fits with your design.
Blurring the boundaries of where your garden ends and the next space/yard begins is a simple option to make small spaces look larger.
Blurring the boundaries of where your garden ends and the next space/yard begins is a simple option to make small spaces look larger.
One easy way to achieve this is by using informal plantings at varying heights to make it unclear how far your boundaries truly extend. To heighten the effect, keep shorter plantings closer to your living/working space and allow the heights to gradually increase. Your yard will seem endless. Steering away from formal rectangular hedges will blur these lines even further.
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Photo by gardeningiftsdirect.com |
Choose large and sturdy mirrors, metal ones for example, because you don’t want them to break. Place them where you know your garden shows its limits, at the back, against the fence, or the wall of your neighbor’s home. but hide them a bit.
Allow plants and vines to grow partly over them, to smooth down their hedges, so they look embedded in a natural environment, like old ruins left in a forest, etc.
You can also paint them to disguise them. For example, a tall mirror on the back fence can turn into a false door if you draw or build a frame, handle, casement, etc. Be creative, and shop around at antique dealers, fairs, and second-hand stores for a very original look and solution for your small space.
Or, as with the photo to the left, build your own illusion. It is the mirror and angle-cut wooden gate that makes it seem as though it is open into another space.
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Photo by bedbathandbeyond.com |
Not only does this increase visual depth perception, it can add a bit of instant and year-round color and visual interest to the venue.
There are certainly more landscape-expanding ideas in the realm of trompe l’oeil.
There are certainly more landscape-expanding ideas in the realm of trompe l’oeil.
Get ready to make your small garden look larger and spectacular with these few visual perspective tricks as well as other ideas you’ll find in garden design articles and trompe l’oeil books.
As you will note in my articles and hear in my lectures, “As a good gardener, do your research before the project and save aggravation and higher costs. Happy gardening all!
For More Ideas
For More Ideas
- Brookes, John. Small Garden. 2006, London, UK: DK Publishing.
- Maitland, Sara & Matthews, Peter. Gardens of Illusion. 2000. London, UK: Cassell Publishers, Ltd.
- Tarling, Thomasina. Truly Tiny Gardens. 1995. North Pomfret, VT: Trafalgar Square Publishing.
If you have questions concerning this article, have a gardening question or two to ask concerning your own landscape or want to suggest a topic for a future column, contact Bruce at gardenguy4u@gmail.com.
See previous columns here
See previous columns here
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