Beginners Guide to Landscape Lighting - MetroGreenscape

10 Jun.,2024

 

Beginners Guide to Landscape Lighting - MetroGreenscape

Having a solid plan regarding landscape lighting is more important than you might imagine. Properly illuminating areas in your yard and your home during the night not only provides a fantastic view of your house but can also deter potential vandals or burglars.

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If you&#;re not sure where to start with landscaping lights, you&#;re in the right place! Here is our handy outdoor lighting guide, where we will walk through where to place landscape lighting, what types of lights to use, and how to use light for the best effect. With help from experienced exterior lighting professionals, MetroGreenscape is here to help you enjoy your landscapes and hardscapes during the day and night.

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Where to Place Landscape Lighting

It is important to light your surrounding landscapes and hardscapes for safety, entertaining, and aesthetic purposes. Although you may be tempted to light up your entire yard for the best visibility, this strategy is ultimately expensive and washes out the space. Strategically illuminating specific features such as walls, ponds, and trees will help create an attractive space for hosting. Outdoor lights also have a functional component, as landscape path lighting and other strategies will make your yard easier to navigate and welcome guests to your home.   

Path Lighting

Highlighting paths makes the landscape easier to navigate for you and your guests, especially for obstacles such as stairs. Path lighting is typically staggered to illuminate the whole path and can create a romantic element to the walkways around your home.

Patio Lighting

Patio lights help provide lights for entertaining and bathe the space in a nice ambiance. This is especially important during seasons when it gets dark earlier, allowing you to grill and host guests late into the night.

Deck Lighting

Illuminating decks and steps is necessary to maneuver around the outside of the home. Strategic placement can define the entertainment area in a comfortable manner and extend the amount of time spent outdoors.

Garden Lights

Lighting up gardens creates an appealing atmosphere and enhances the beauty of the plants and surrounding yard. This allows you to spend more time in nature and enjoy your glowing garden at any time. As an additional practical benefit, LED lights can stimulate plant growth.

Hardscape Lighting

Hardscapes such as retaining walls, rocks, and wooden arbors come alive during the night with the right lighting. The best hardscape lighting can add dimension that is unnoticeable during the day and highlight the natural beauty of your surroundings.

Yard Lights

Proper illumination of your front and back yards will look inviting to guests while discouraging any intruders through increased visibility. Well-placed lights will showcase your home&#;s landscaping and increase curb appeal.

Pond Lighting

Ponds are a great focal point that the proper lighting can draw attention to. Highlighting ponds and other water features adds drama and intrigue to your landscape.

Types of Landscape Lighting

Along with considering what objects to light, there are different types of outdoor lighting to use in your yard. You should consider their individual characteristics when choosing the low-voltage lighting option best suited for your needs. You can also choose to mix a variety of light options for the full illumination of outdoor spaces.

Post Cap Lights

Post cap lights are incorporated with deck posts and add a glow and ambiance to your entertaining spaces. They make for good decoration and add safety as guests move around the space.

Well-Lights

Well lights, or inground lights, are circular fixtures that are used to illuminate walkways, driveways, flowerbeds, and trees in a sophisticated manner. They are installed directly into the ground so that the light effect stands out instead of the fixture itself.

Floodlights/Spotlights

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Floodlights and spotlights are both used to visual interests in the yard such as statues, shrubs, or trees. They are differentiated by the spread of light produced. Where spotlights are more concentrated to highlight specific details, floodlights have a wider beam to illuminate general areas. Where to place landscape spotlights depends on what interesting features you want to highlight in your yard.

Path Lights

Use these for lining any hard-to-see areas in your yard, flowerbed, or walkway. They add an outdoor ambiance and provide safety as well. These lights also help increase safety and curb appeal for your home.

Deck lights

Deck lights are used to improve safety when walking up or down deck stairs at night. They are directly installed into the hardscape or on the deck itself to accentuate architectural details and light up entertainment spaces.

Post Lights

Like path lights, post lights help accentuate a pathway by brightening spaces that get lost in the dark. They are larger and taller and set an ambient tone without being too bright.

Landscape Lighting Design 

Along with various types of yard lights, there are different strategies to highlight certain areas. The effects of landscape lighting design can create a certain mood or ambiance in the space.

Highlighting

Using light to illuminate the shape, color, and form of interesting objects is known as highlighting. This is achieved by placing floodlights or spotlights at the foot of the feature. The distance and angle of the beam can be adjusted until the desired effect is achieved on the plant, statue, or unique architecture.

Silhouetting

Placing spotlights or well-lights behind an object or plant can highlight dramatic shapes that aren&#;t as noticeable during the day. The light source is hidden and creates a silhouette as it shines towards the path or yard.

Accenting

Another strategy for emphasizing specific features such as trees, statues, and other décor is accenting. This is accomplished by focusing a narrow spotlight, either down or up, on the object from a hidden position.

Shadowing

As the name suggests, shadowing creates a shadow on the wall or hardscape behind the item for a moody effect. You can do this by placing a spotlight, well light, or floodlight between the vantage point and object or plant to be illuminated.

Moonlighting

Moonlighting is a technique that uses spotlights high in trees angled downward to create the effect of moonlights. A soft light fixture bathes the ground below in gentle light and creates soft shadows from the tree&#;s lower branches.

Washing

Washing is produced by illuminating a large wall or hedge with light at an indirect angle. Floodlights are used to cast an even gentle light in an entertainment area.

Downlighting

A method for accenting planting beds or garden features from above by mimicking natural light is downlighting. This makes a garden safer and more secure, while also creating a warm and natural glow. This effect is produced by fixing outdoor lights in a tall trellis, eave, or hardscape.

Uplighting

Uplighting can create different angles of luminescence by placing spotlights or well-lights close to the base of an object. This strategy creates drama with tall structures such as trees or statues by showing off its form from below.

Grazing

If you have flat surfaces, grazing can be used to take advantage of their texture by creating dramatic shadows. This can be done by using well lights or hardscape lights to graze the surface of different hardscape items.

General Landscape Lighting Tips and Best Practices for DIYers

Since most outdoor lighting is low-voltage, you don&#;t need electrical experience to install. For a DIY landscape lighting project, the only tool you need is a wire stripper. Here are some safe and secure tips:

  • Even though LED lights are more common these days, you don&#;t have to rip out any old halogen fixtures. You can still enjoy the benefits of LEDs with retrofit bulbs. Replace the halogen bulbs with ones that are the same base type and have the same wattage.
  • After planting, then you should install underground wiring, so you don&#;t risk accidentally cutting it with a shovel.
  • Get rid of factory-installed connectors because standard connectors will work buried underground for only a short while before they corrode and fail. Make splice connections with gel-filled wire connectors, which are specially made for the outdoors.
  • Don&#;t focus lights directly onto a patio. What works well is indirect lighting, by illuminating trees, boulders and other objects around the space.
  • You don&#;t want to overlap pools of light. Make sure you don&#;t mount fixtures too close to one another.

Now&#;s the Time to Install Outdoor Lights 

At MetroGreenscape, we know that the right lighting can help your hardscapes and landscapes stand out in your neighborhood. We want your yard to look as eye-catching at night as it does during the day. That&#;s why our team offers planning, installation, and maintenance services, taking care of the outdoor lighting process from start to end.

As your landscape experts, we know which trees, gardens, and hardscape features to highlight, and which light features are best for the job. When combined with professional installation and high-quality products, you will have outdoor lighting that will last for years. For more help with landscape lighting, feel free to contact us.

How to Create a Landscape Lighting Installation Plan

Laying out an installation plan for a low voltage landscape lighting system is fairly straightforward, but it&#;s helpful to know a few things up front. These are the main steps, along with some tips to ensure a successful installation.

Basic Layout

A landscape lighting system has four main components:

  • Low Voltage Transformer. This is the power supply for the system. Ideally, it is mounted to a stand near the house, or attached directly to the structure &#; keep in mind the bottom of the transformer needs to be at least 12&#; from the ground. Alternatively, the transformer could be located inside the house &#; usually the basement or garage. But running the wires through the wall requires the skills of an electrician since special codes apply. Outdoor installation is preferred for do-it-yourself installation.
  • Fixtures. These are, of course, the producers of light. They get their power from the transformer. Each lighting fixture contains a light source &#; either an integrated (built-in) LED source or a replaceable lamp (bulb). The lamp could be the older incandescent (usually halogen) type or it could be an LED lamp. The voltage supplied to the fixtures is critical and we will discuss that below.
  • Wire. This is the cable that connects to the transformer and supplies power to the fixtures. The wire is rated according to the size of its conductors. Selecting the proper size wire is one of the most important aspects of the lighting plan; we&#;ll elaborate below.
  • Wire Connections. The wire from the transformer needs to connect to the wires from the fixtures. These connections can be made in several ways that involve any of various connector types. Again, these are described below.

Steps

1. Start a Sketch. Most landscape lighting designers begin their layout by creating a rough sketch of the property, marking where each fixture will be placed. For larger properties, use a separate piece of paper for each lighting region (zone).  Try to be as accurate as possible with your sketch because you will be using it to help estimate distances for wire runs. You can use a blank piece of paper or graph paper. Attach this to a clipboard so you can walk the property and sketch as you go along.

2. Set the Transformer Location. The best placement for the low voltage transformer is usually next to the house in a hidden location (behind a garden bed, near air conditioning equipment, etc.). It should be as close as possible to the fixture locations. Sometimes it makes sense to use more than one transformer &#; especially when fixtures are situated throughout a large property. If multiple transformers are used then create a separate plan for each one. Mark transformer locations on your sketch.

3. Set Fixture Locations. Before you install any fixtures in the property, mark their approximate positions in the landscape using small flags or pencils. Indicate the positions on your sketch and mark what fixture types will go at each location. As you walk the property, make rough measurements to indicate the distances between fixtures and the transformer, and between the fixtures themselves.

4. Determine Wire Runs. Now, the task is to plan how to provide power to the fixtures. There are many wiring methods available. You don&#;t want to run a single wire from each fixture to the transformer &#; 20 fixtures, 20 wires all ending at the transformer &#; that would waste a lot of wire. Instead, we minimize the total amount of wire by using one of the following wiring methods.

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