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Landscape Gardening in Japan, 1912
> Chapter 12. Garden Composition
Chapter 12. Garden Composition
Semi elaborate Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Clumps and groups of trees in Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Rough style Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Rocks in rough style Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Maxims for design and composition
Learning by visiting and sketching natural scenery
Avoiding copying scenery
Site survey and examination
Aspect and prospect in Japanese gardens
Design in relation to landscape context
Foreground and background composition
Sen no Rikyu compositional principles
Composition in hill gardens
Design composition for large and small gardens
Moss, shade and the impression of coolness
Hill Garden style of design Tsukiyama niwa
Land and water in a sansui garden
Finished, intermediary and rough Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Named stones for Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Named trees for Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Other features of Hill Gardens Tsukiyama
Flat garden style Hira niwa
Elaborate Flat Garden style Hira niwa
Intermediary Flat Garden style Hira niwa
Rough Flat Garden style Hira niwa
Tea Room Gardens Cha Niwa
Division of Tea Gardens Cha Niwa
Entrances to Tea Gardens Cha Niwa
Pathways in Tea Gardens Cha Niwa
Tamagawa Tea gardens
Other kinds of Tea Garden
Tea Garden attributed to Imagawa Yoshimoto
Tea Garden suggesting Yatsuhashi, in Mikawa
An unusual Tea Garden
Passage Gardens Roji niwa
Passage Gardens with views
Guardian, Worshipping and Two Gods Stones
Roji Passage Garden with Maple-trees alone
Gardens designed by famous men
Cherry Tree Gardens
Sanded reception gardens Sunagata niwa
Garden imitating Matsushima Coast, near Sendai
Uji River, Kosho-ji Temple and other famous scenes