How to Successfully Work with An Online Landscape Designer

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Setting yourself up for a successful project

You’re ready to design your outdoor space online - great! Now what?

We asked our community of landscape designers and builders: 

  • What makes a great online design client? 

  • What makes an online design project run smoothly? 

  • How can online design clients set themselves up for success? 

Read on for their advice!

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Decisions, Decisions

As a client, there are a few key decisions to make before launching your online design project. 

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Budget

It doesn’t have to be to the penny, but a ballpark budget estimate will help your designer make appropriate decisions for your project. 

Not familiar with the cost of landscape designs? You aren’t alone. Yardzen’s onboarding flow will provide you with cost estimates for each design feature you may consider including in your project. Looking for a grand vision with no budget cap? That’s fine too. We’ll keep a tally of your design costs so you have a rough understanding of the estimate you could expect to receive when installing your dream landscape.

Start estimating the price of your project with our Guide to Landscape Costs.

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Priorities

Before your designer gets to work, take time to prioritize the features you’d like to include in your design.

Every design project eventually involves choices about what to keep and what to omit. Setting priorities at the outset simplifies this process, and aligns the entire Design and Build team around common goals.  

Don’t worry, priorities can shift as you go - this is often a part of the design process.

Should it stay or should it go?

Did you just build a new deck and don’t want anyone to touch it? Is that cracked pavement killing you? Make an itemized list of anything that absolutely must remain or be removed, and your designer will follow it accordingly. 

On the fence about whether to keep or remove certain features in your yard?  No problem, just let us know about these “maybes” during onboarding and your designer will figure out a solution.

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Style

Straight lines or curves? Stone or concrete? Colors or neutrals? 

It’s important to get a feel for what landscape style you’d like to apply to your design before you start working with your designer. 

Seeking inspiration? Yardzen’s design gallery has some great examples to consider. 

Not sure what style you want? No problem, your online landscape designer is happy to steer the style ship. Just let them know a bit about what you like, and they’ll take it from there.

Do I need to research anything before I begin?

The short answer is no. Yardzen’s simple onboarding process only requires that you share your budget, priorities, and some basic information about your property. Zero landscape expertise required.  

Two caveats: 

  • If you are a part of an HOA, live in a historical district, or your property is subject to another regulatory agency, you will need to determine any special rules that apply to landscape designs on your property and share them with your design team.

  • For those who have access to surveys or other technical drawings that provide elevations or dimensions for your home and property, these drawings are very helpful, and worth digging up.

Communication is Key

Design projects live or die by communication. This is especially true when working with an online landscape designer. 

How can you communicate effectively in a design project? 

Use the appropriate medium 

Text is great to explain priorities, but starts to fail when describing vision - “beautiful” can mean ten different things to ten different people. 

You’ll need images to help communicate the look and feel you hope to achieve, so take care to select inspiration images that tell the story you want your designer to hear. Choose pictures that show entire spaces and objects - the whole plant, not just a leaf.  Above all, be sure to add text captions to any inspiration images you share - tell us what you like in each image, so your designer doesn't have to guess.

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Capture the full property 

In lieu of a site visit, we rely on images and video to accurately understand your existing property. The photos are an easily accessible reference, while the video cements how each space in the property flows into the next.

Take care to include your entire yard - no blank spots, please - and provide extra detail on any tricky or focus areas. 

Pro tip: when photographing slopes, include a view looking perpendicular across the slope, ideally with a fence or wall in the background - this helps to make the slope angle clearer.

The Goldilocks Rule

Not too much, not too little, just the right amount. 

It’s easy to understand how not sharing enough information can leave a designer in the dark. In fact, sharing too much information can cause even more difficulty than not sharing enough.

Design is a process of winnowing down to the most essential and most effective features. Communication about design is most effective when it takes the same approach. By narrowing down your feedback to the key points and communicating them concisely, you’ll set your designer up for success. 

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Align Expectations

Online landscape design operates differently than a traditional practice, and therefore requires a different set of expectations going into the process.

So what should you expect?

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Structured Feedback

Yardzen clients share feedback at designated stages in the design process, namely at the outset and after receiving a design iteration. 

A client may take all the time they need to share feedback, but once they have finished doing so, we ask that they withhold further comments until they receive the next iteration of their design. 

This alternating rhythm of focused feedback and uninterrupted design time is central to an efficient design process. Expect to give the designer a little space to work their magic.

Conceptual Design

Yardzen designs aspire to be as accurate and realistic as possible, but we rely on the contractors in our community to make final adjustments that adapt your designs to the specifics of your property. Expect your design to hit the big picture ideas, stylistic details, and botanical wishlists, but also to lean on the contractor for locking in precise dimensions, slopes, and responses to light patterns.

Change is Good

Design is iterative. Sometimes the first iteration is spot on, but more often a client will want to revise parts of their initial design. This is normal, and healthy! 

Even as you move into the installation phase, you can expect to continue the process of adjusting the design working directly with a contractor. 

Revisions often revolve around budget - some things must be removed for others to remain. While we try to address these tradeoffs in onboarding, your design and build teams expect these situations to arise from time to time, and are ready to help you navigate them.

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Trust the Process

We get it: design can be stressful, and often coincides with other stressors, be it a wedding, a move to a new home, the addition of a new child or pet to the family. Working with an online landscape designer may feel uncomfortable at first to those expecting a traditional design experience, but when you embrace the process, it works out beautifully. 

Follow the tips above, dig in, and enjoy!

How to Create a Warm & Cozy Backyard

Yardzen backyard patio with brick pavers, fire pit, and patio furniture via @kismet_house

Yardzen backyard patio with brick pavers, fire pit, and patio furniture via @kismet_house

Large and small backyards alike can be cozy—and there’s more to it than just blankets (but we’ve got those, too). Wherever you live, there is a good chance that you’ll be spending a lot more time in outdoor areas this fall and winter. So, we tapped our resident stylist to recommend a couple of key items and outdoor decor to spur cozy backyard ideas!

Looking for an entire makeover for your outdoor living space with more permanent solutions like wind-blocking pergolas and fire pits? Check out our Outdoor Fire Pits & Fireplaces story and our most recent article with Hunker, 6 Ways To Extend the Lease on Outdoor Living Into the Fall and Beyond.

01

Motor Robe with Leather Carrier

With its timeless color combinations and convenient leather carrier, this Pendleton 100% wool throw is a perennial outdoor companion that makes any seating area or hammock instantly more inviting.

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02

Mulling Spices

Nothing compliments the crisp autumn air like the aroma of a warm, bubbling pot of mulling spices. Hand-blended in Oakland, Oaktown Spice Shop’s rich mix of allspice, ginger, cardamom, cinnamon and cloves will keep you warm inside and out. 

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03

Helios Metreo

Galanter and Jones’ smooth heated outdoor seat pretty much eschews the necessity for any other warming accoutrements. Smooth, modern and radiantly heated, the company’s founders compare taking it to stepping into a warm hot tub, sans the water, of course.

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04

Polywood x West Elm Rocking Chair

There are more than a few reasons to indulge in this sweet little modern rocker. The low-profile and clean lines help eschew the rocker’s granny image plus it’s made in the U.S. of Polywood, a recycled outdoor furniture material made from the likes of plastic milk jugs and detergent bottles that won’t splinter, crack or peel.

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05

Yukon Fire Pit

More flame, less smoke. Featuring Solo Stove’s Signature 360° Airflow Design™, this sleek stainless steel wood burning fire pit will give you a smoke free, roaring fire in minutes. Its 27” size is perfect for creating a warm and cozy outdoor lounging space.

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06

Canvas Log Carrier

Manufactured in Massachusetts since 1921, Steele’s durable combination of tough cotton canvas and reinforced leather handles are appreciated for both its form and function.

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07

Mini LED String Lights

Add a festive ambiance to your outdoor gathering spaces by wrapping tree trunks and branches in Pottery Barn’s flexible mini LED string lights. Battery powered; these sparkly lights make it easy to add outdoor lighting and brighten up every corner of your yard. They’re also eco-friendly, and last up to 80 hours on a single AAA battery charge. 

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08

Olive Wreath

No need to diy a natural wreath—add a touch of texture to your door or exterior walls with a wreath handcrafted of fresh California-grown olive branches from Williams Sonoma. The wreath will arrive fresh and fragrant, dry beautifully, and last for months. 

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09

Quincy Solar Lanterns

You won’t regret adding these no-fuss black hurricanes to your list of must-haves this fall. Crafted of glass and metal, these sleek handled lanterns come with solar-powered flameless candles which, on a full charge, keep lit for up to eight hours.

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10

Shearling-Lined Moc Clogs

Jenni Kayne’s go-anywhere slippers are made from suede and a warm shearling lining. So, whether you’re sipping morning coffee on the porch or enjoying a casual alfresco meal, we’re betting you’ll live in these soft mocs all season. 

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OUR FAVORITE COZY BACKYARD DESIGNS

Water features like heated swimming pools and hot tubs are a client favorite.

Cozy backyard design with wooden hot tub and string lights in elk grove, ca.

Yardzen design for client in Elk Grove, CA

Dining table under shaded pergola and heated swimming pool in Walden, NY landscape design.

Dining table under shaded pergola and heated swimming pool in Walden, NY landscape design

Thoughtful design can create cozy rooms in a large outdoor area.

Outdoor kitchen and dining area with fireplace in San Diego, CA landscape design

Outdoor kitchen and dining area with fireplace in San Diego, CA landscape design

Outdoor living room with natural stump coffee tables in Austin, TX landscape design

Outdoor living room with natural stump coffee tables in Austin, TX landscape design

CREATING A COZY BACKYARD DESIGN TAILORED TO YOUR NEEDS

Yardzen's award-winning online exterior and landscape design service is tailored to homeowners with both large and small yards in all fifty states in the U.S. Our design process begins with understanding your outdoor space, style, landscaping ideas, and a discussion of your budget and vision to minimize surprises when it comes time to build. 

Our top-notch designers then develop a personalized vision for your yard, shared through 3D renderings, 2D plan drawings, and plant and material lists. Your design will capture the look, feel, and function you are hoping for, all while keeping costs within range. 

Once your design is complete, we'll help you connect with a local contractor from our Pro Network of vetted professional contractors to install your new design.

Ready to bring your design ideas to life? Create your design profile or explore our professional backyard landscaping and exterior design packages today!

Guide to Fall & Winter Landscaping

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It can be easy to feel defeated by winter in the yard - the chill, the snow, the bare branches - but have heart! There is much we can do to keep our yards beautiful and functional through the chilly season. Yardzen’s Design Director, Kevin Lenhart, shares his top tips for winter landscaping and year-round outdoor living, including design principles he uses in his own all-seasons yard.

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The Easiest Landscape Upgrade You Will Ever Make

Sitting outside with my family in the evenings is a ritual—a way to wind down after a busy day of school and work. And, for the most part, we don’t let the weather get in the way. The trick is to stay warm and plan ahead.

Rule #1: dress warmly and keep blankets on hand. Sweaters are the easiest landscape upgrade you will ever make. 

We also suggest keeping warm blankets on hand. The right blanket doubles as a colorful accent piece, and can be kept within reach in a weatherproof container.

Invest in a Heat Source

For those willing to invest a bit, a heat source like a fire pit, tower heater, or infrared heater is a must for winter landscaping. While custom fire pits are an investment, prefab gas fire pits can run for as little as a few hundred dollars. Infrared heaters, while spendier than towers, save valuable ground space by mounting to overhead structures like pergola beams - for smaller areas, mounted infrareds allow that crucial extra chair to fit.

Over 65% of Yardzen clients request a fire pit in their design, including front yard fire pits for year-round porch living. (Learn more in our 2021 trend report!)

Warmed by Nature

Sunlight is the supreme heater. Let it in!

Deciduous trees planted around gathering zones (especially south- or west-facing areas) allow sunlight through their bare branches, keeping outdoor spaces warm in the winter months. When leaves return in the spring and summer, the same trees block the sun and provide cooling shade. This same strategy can be used to help heat and cool your home, reducing home energy consumption.

What is a deciduous tree? In the simplest terms: they lose their leaves. Common varieties include birches, maples, oaks, cherries, crabapples, magnolias, and dogwoods. And, the good news is that the cool season is the best time to plant them!

Image via The Spruce

Image via The Spruce

Block the Wind

Evergreen windbreaks provide crucial shelter from northerly winter winds. The trick is to create a gapless barrier, be it a single thick hedge, a mix of low and tall plants, or even a row of plant containers with dense evergreens. Whatever their makeup, windbreaks should be positioned to the north of gathering zones to block winds before they reach you. This will keep your home warmer too!

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Protect from the Elements

Pergolas, covered patios, and porches can transform a yard into an all-seasons gathering space. There are several pergola options with cantilevered and removable covers that protect from the elements.

A cozy Yardzen backyard with a jute rug.

A cozy Yardzen backyard with a jute rug.

Don’t Forget the Floor

When exposed to daytime sunlight, flooring made from dense materials like concrete or pavers will absorb and retain the sun’s warmth. After a long day drinking in sunlight, these materials reradiate their absorbed heat, helping to offset the cold on winter evenings. 

A word of warning, the opposite also holds true: these same materials kept shaded all day in cold weather will act like an icebox at night. If this is your situation, we suggest a thick outdoor rug to minimize the cooling effect - think of it as putting a sweater on your concrete. Added bonus: outdoor rugs, like blankets, are great accent pieces!

String lights in a recently completed Yardzen backyard! Photo by The DIY Playbook. Learn more in her blog post all about her Yardzen experience!

String lights in a recently completed Yardzen backyard! Photo by The DIY Playbook. Learn more in her blog post all about her Yardzen experience!

Light it Up

Easy to install and attractive, string lights are a no-brainer solution to shorter winter days. When it comes to string lights, one of my top tips is: less is more. Use string lights to outline the edges of a space, or to imply a zone in your yard, but avoid stringing them across key views. Lights along three edges with an unstrung fourth edge will make a cinema of your seating area. 

Wherever they may be, we suggest turning off all outdoor lights when not in use. Lights left on all night pose a surprisingly serious threat to local insect populations (and, by extension, to the birds and other creatures who eat them).

Evergreen Boxwoods add year-round color and lushness to the yard.

Evergreen Boxwoods add year-round color and lushness to the yard.

Evergreens

Winter landscaping isn’t the first thing most of us think of when we envision beautiful outdoor spaces, but the right choices will keep your yard looking beautiful throughout the entire year.

The easiest trick: plant evergreens. We suggest at least one evergreen species per planting area. 

Evergreens are also great in containers. Position containers at the corners of gathering spaces to add coveted winter foliage, or arrange them as a windbreak. There’s no shortage of species to choose from: Sedum, Salvia, Blue Spruce, Verbena, and Boxwood are just a few of the container friendly, winter-hardy evergreens out there.

Winter-blooming Hellebores

Winter-blooming Hellebores

Time to Shine

Pay attention to bloom timing. Choose plants that bloom early in the spring (Spring-blooming Crocus, Paperwhites) and late in the fall/early in the winter (Hellebores, Camellia sasanqua). Add trees that bloom on bare branches like Cercis or Flowering Cherry (both excellent habitat trees, to boot!). 

By sequencing blooms to last as much of the year as possible, you not only create a dynamic and colorful winter design, you provide a steady supply of habitat for critical pollinator species like native bees.

Photo by Susan J. Tweit

Let it Be

For those - author included - who find beauty in winter-dormant meadows, you can also help your local ecosystems by leaving dead plant material alone. By keeping just the bottom 12” of winter-dormant plants in place (you can trim off the top), you do a great service to many species of bugs, who in turn provide crucial food for migrating birds. 

Not into that? We get it. Here’s a workaround: cut down dead plant material in long stalks, bundle it, and place it in a less visible part of your yard for the bugs to enjoy all winter long.

Photo by Thomas J. Story via Sunset

Photo by Thomas J. Story via Sunset

Love Winter for Being Winter

The above steps will help you get your yard and outdoor spaces prepped for winter beauty and activity, but the best tip of all is to embrace winter for what it is. A little chill becomes a lovely memory in the midst of summer heat, and the drama of your winter landscape helps your spring blooms feel all the more lush. Bundle up, and enjoy!

Fall & Winter Edible Garden Checklist

Kyle Hagerty in his edible garden in Sacramento

Kyle Hagerty in his edible garden in Sacramento

If you think that edible gardening ends in the fall, think again! The cooler months are a fantastic time to get planting. “For me, a winter garden is just as exciting as a summer garden.” says Kyle Hagerty, the garden expert behind the wildly popular Instagram account Urban Gardener in Sacramento, Calif., and more recently, a YouTube channel packed with smart gardening basics. “It may not be as colorful, but one of the nice thing is the energy of the garden follows the energy of the season – chill and laid back. There’s not as much pressure from pests, you don’t have to worry about irrigation, and you can harvest as needed.” To get started, Hagerty is sharing his top to-dos from his cold-season gardening checklist.

Watch Kyle’s Fall Garden Tutorial here!

Get started on your garden today!

Start a Journal

“Record some notes about your summer garden discoveries, whether it’s your first summer, or maybe you’re an experienced gardener,” he says. Jot down mistakes, successes, a new favorite variety or issues with pests. When it comes time to start prepping your garden again for the season you can return to your notes for guidance. 

Save Seeds 

“Saving seeds can be a little complex,” says Hagerty. The general thing to consider is that the only really viable seeds that will reproduce that plant exactly are heirloom seeds from open-pollinated varieties. (Another good reason to hang on to those plant tags or seed packets.) On the other hand, seeds from hybrids will not produce a plant identical to the parent. 

Remove Summer Annuals

By pulling out dead and diseased plants and vines, you’re also removing the host for pests, disease and fungal spores, says Hagerty. 

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Add Compost

“Adding compost is the best thing you can do to improve the composition of your soil, and this is the best time to do it,” he says. As it rains throughout the fall and winter, the worms will help work that compost into the soil, just in time for spring planting. He recommends a 2-4 inch layer of homemade or store-bought compost.

Sweet peas in Kyle’s cool season garden

Sweet peas in Kyle’s cool season garden

Start Fall & Winter Plants

Check out our Cold-Season Edible Garden Guide!

If you think that edible gardening ends in the fall, think again! Cool season gardens produce some of our favorite veggies: kale, cauliflower, peas, carrots, lettuce, beets, onions, broccoli. In most regions, it’s best to start these in September and October, but along the West Coast and in the Southeast and Southwest, you can still plant cold-hearty plants, like kale, spinach, onions, Swiss chard, sweet peas, garlic, and herbs throughout the fall and winter. Also, don’t forget bare-root fruits, like blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, grapes, and stone fruit, which you can find online or at your local nursery by February.

Start a Compost Pile

“Speaking of compost, fall is also a good time to start a large compost pile.” Compost does best when you have a large quantity, making fall the ideal time to achieve the perfect carbon to nitrogen ratio. Balance the green vines and plants you remove from your summer garden (sans diseased plants, of course) with equal parts dried fall leaves. (Hagerty even keeps an extra bag of leaves on hand to add to the pile throughout the year.) This time of year, discarded pumpkins make great compost. Chop those pumpkins up first, as smaller material breaks down more easily.

What to Plant in Fall & Winter

A cold-season harvest

A cold-season harvest

If you think that edible gardening ends with cold weather, think again! Fall and winter gardens produce some of our favorite fruits and vegetables: kale, cauliflower, peas, carrots, lettuce, beets, onions, and broccoli, just to name a few! To boot, these plants tend to be some of the easiest to grow, making fall and winter gardens excellent for the beginning gardener.

Get started on your garden today!

Carrots, broccoli, and greens growing in the garden

Carrots, broccoli, and greens growing in the garden

What to Plant When

September

Broccoli, Cauliflower, Carrots, Beets, Radish, Kale, Spinach, Onions, Swiss chard, Lettuce, Peas, Garlic, Fava beans, Herbs

October & November

Kale, Spinach, Onions, Swiss chard, Lettuce, Peas, Garlic, Fava beans, Herbs

January & February

Bare-root fruits, like blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, grapes, and stone fruit, which you can find online or at your local nursery by February.

Learn more about preparing you fall and winter garden here!

A Note About Growing Conditions

Along the West Coast and throughout much of the Southeast and Southwest, fall and winter crops are able to grow outside, uncovered, despite cold temperatures and frost. In places like the Northeast, Midwest, and the Rockies, insulating solutions, like cold frames and greenhouses, are necessary to keep your plants happy during the coldest months.

Yardzen's Top 3 Favorite Backyard Saunas

Outdoor sauna

Saunas don’t only exist in spas--there are many cases to be made for having one in your own home. This modern take on an ancient tradition can transform your yard into a year-round oasis of your own. They can also improve your health. Saunas are proven to promote pain relief and relaxation.

Yardzen is no stranger to designing around outdoor saunas. Over the past year, as people have forgone trips to the spa, we’ve seen a sharp increase in requests for this added luxury.

If you’re dreaming of a backyard sauna of your own, here are our favorite options. Plus, a couple inspiration photos from Yardzen designs!

01 The Cedar Barrel

If you’re focused on looks - this Cedar Barrel design from Redwood Outdoors is the perfect fit for you. This is a traditional Scandinavian design, an interlocking system that allows the wood to ‘breathe’ - contracting and expanding as need be. 

02 The Luxury Option

Looking for something splurge-worthy? Check out the Luna Outdoor Sauna. It’s almost completely customizable - choose your exterior wood type, interior seating arrangement and design, and you can even opt for upgrades like lounge seating or an added porch.

03 The Compact Design

In the event you’re lacking a ton of extra space, your best bet for a compact design is this 3-person design available at Home Depot. Made from natural Canadian hemlock wood, it’s durable and attractive - a welcome addition to yards of any size.

 

YARDZEN DESIGNS WITH OUTDOOR SAUNAS WE LOVE

Proof you don’t need a massive yard to have an outdoor sauna.

Proof you don’t need a massive yard to have an outdoor sauna.

Who wouldn’t want an outdoor sauna with a view like this one?

Who wouldn’t want an outdoor sauna with a view like this one?

Your sauna doesn’t have to stick out - it can melt seamlessly into your entire design.

Your sauna doesn’t have to stick out - it can melt seamlessly into your entire design.

You don’t necessarily have to choose between a sauna and a fire pit - you can have both.

You don’t necessarily have to choose between a sauna and a fire pit - you can have both.

Modern Farmhouse Before & After

Black mulch pairs beautifully with the climate-adapted and habitat-supporting plants in the front yard! If you look closely, you’ll notice that the chickens join in the family fun, too!

Black mulch pairs beautifully with the climate-adapted and habitat-supporting plants in the front yard! If you look closely, you’ll notice that the chickens join in the family fun, too!

Carla Dougher and her family lost their home in Los Gatos on the morning of January 3, 2018. What started as an electrical fire in the garage of their 1970s rancher ended up engulfing the house. The property, formerly owned by her grandparents, immigrants from Lebanon, held a lot of meaning for Carla, so she set out to rebuild.

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Carla’s new home, a modern farmhouse, reflects her past as a “farm girl.” She grew up doing 4H and raising animals, and she still keeps chickens today (we designed a chicken coop for her new brood!). The home also reflects Los Gatos’ history as a farming town. Now the home of major tech companies like Netflix, it was once covered in orchards.

Carla designed everything in her home, from the board-and-battened exterior to the tiny interior details, like the knobs on her drawers. Her greatest ally in the process: social media. Over the last two years designing and building her home, she has spent countless hours on Pinterest and Instagram, pouring through projects and sourcing inspiration to help craft every inch of her home. One of her favorite finds on Instagram: Clé tile, which adorns several rooms in her house and will make an appearance outside as well.

Another favorite find on Instagram: Yardzen.

Carla first contacted Yardzen in February of 2019 and did a project consult with Yardzen’s co-founder, Allison. She wasn’t ready to place her order yet—construction on the house hadn’t begun—but she was excited to learn how a previously “traditional” industry was using technology, and she wanted to learn more. Once the bones of the house were in place, Carla was ready to place her order with Yardzen.

When asked why she chose Yardzen, Carla stressed the importance of a collaborative team. After spending so much time searching for inspiration and crafting her house, she “had a good sense of what [she] wanted for the design” and she “wanted to work with a “team of experts well-versed in the best design practices to bring [her] vision to life.” She feared that if she hired a “traditional” landscape designer, they wouldn’t share her aesthetic and would be less open to feedback. “Working with someone in person, I felt like I was going to be challenged to get the end product I really wanted. I knew I needed to be in a more collaborative role.”

While going through the process, Carla enjoyed all of the opportunities to share her ideas. She had a lot of “fun” using the online platform. She enjoyed answering the questions about style and sharing all of her inspiration photos. She felt like she was able to “clearly communicate the design look and feel I wanted.” All of the opportunities to share her ideas made her feel “like I had more control.” The result: a modern farmhouse yard, complete with raised beds, a chicken coop, an outdoor kitchen, and ample space for enjoying the outdoors.

After going through the Yardzen design process, Carla connected with one of Yardzen’s vetted contractors to complete the install of the yard. The build process was just as fun, easy, and collaborative as the design process—Carla even jumped in to help!

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Now that the yard is complete, Carla and her family enjoy every evening outside—eating alfresco with friends, roasting s’mores by the fire, and spending time with the chickens! Scroll through the photos below to see Carla’s modern farmyard!

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One Table, Three Fall Looks

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For an in-season tabletop, start with inexpensive accessories like crisp apples, foraged fall branches and fairytale pumpkins. 

Our plans for autumn? Dining at home outdoors. And this season, we were inspired by fall’s harvest and its warm shades of bronze, rust, orange and gold. Here are three looks for every style to get you through Thanksgiving. 

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Make it moody  

For an inspired fall palette, we love to juxtapose warm autumn hues with dark accents. We set the wood tabletop with black ceramic plates, contrasting white and burnt orange graphic napkins, amber-handled flatware and seagrass wrapped tumblers. An oversized French vintage breadboard is topped with seasonal fruit, including Mission figs and Crimson pears. A primitive wooden bowl overflows with dried persimmons and a ceramic ochre bowl holds whole walnuts. Finish the look by filling the center of the table with a tall arrangement of gold, orange and caramel colored flowers and foliage. Finally, layer in tonal pumpkins or gourds along with wisps of dried flowers or grasses.  

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Put a new spin on Halloween décor 

Celebrate the season of ghosts and ghouls with a modern take on a traditional Halloween tabletop. We love the idea of doubling down on the season’s notoriously famed orange hue, so we went with a primarily monochromic story layering on tons of tonal orange, rust and golden hues. We love the simplicity of this striped tablecloth, and for a more rustic look you can add an assortment of mismatched terracotta plates, serveware and graphic vintage Mexican stoneware. Fill the center of the table with vessels in various sizes, stuffing them with fresh no-fuss bouquets of bright orange Marigolds. Choose an assortment of fresh and dried fruit, filling large and small bowls with the likes sugar-coated orange slices and seasonal persimmons. We also draped platters with ornamental dates, layered in beeswax votives and dotted spaces with mini orange pumpkins. Don’t be afraid to mix up that tonal palette with another hue. We dropped in a pair of matte light blue Fairytale pumpkins to offset the warm tones and add contrast.

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Create a picnic-style tabletop

A classic white and navy blue gingham tablecloth sets the stage for a refreshing preppy fall look. We started by layering natural white ceramic plates with graphic blue and brown windowpane napkins and French vintage flatware paired with simple stemless wineglasses. Fall is also the perfect season to forgo traditional flower arrangements in favor of foraging freshly clipped branches brimming with brown and gold leaves. We casually tucked a handful into a large glass pickling jar for a stunning centerpiece. Add more color with festive fruit, we used large wood bowl with just harvested apples in greens and reds as well as coordinating pomegranates. Dress it up with accents like beeswax pillars in glass hurricanes, tiny white pumpkins and for texture, bowls with shelled nuts.

Top 5 Best Outdoor Heat Lamps

Add one of these heat lamps to your outdoor space, and chill

At Yardzen, we’re embracing outdoor living year-round, think everything from alfresco meals to sunset movies and socially distanced gatherings. If a little winter chill is making you hesitant to partake, we’ve rounded-up some of our favorite heat lamps to help every kind of space feel warm and toasty.  

01 Stainless Steel Patio Heater

Hampton Bay’s heater is perfect for patios around 200-square-feet, this traditional stainless-steel heater packs a warm punch. 

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02 Mr. Heater Portable Buddy

For social distanced gatherings that call for individual warmth, we love Bass Pro Shops’ portable, foldable radiant propane heater. It heats 225-square-foot spaces for more than 100 hours, plus we love the color scheme.

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03 Tabletop Patio Heater

Rejuvenation’s tabletop patio heater is perfect for cozying up to in the morning with a book or a sunset cocktail. At just over two feet high, this modern, monochromatic beauty is also a cinch to move wherever a little heat is needed most.

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04 Pamapic Patio Heater

We’re feeling the warm bronze finish of this lofty propane heater. At just over seven feet tall, its heat range reaches 18 feet in diameter, so no one is forced into huddle. It also comes with a waterproof cover. 

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05 A-Line Heater

Available in several colors, this elevated pyramid style heater features steel side panels and chrome reflectors to enhance the orange flame. The sleek lamp heats in a 360-degree radius, and it’s perfect for modern outdoor décor. 

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