Historically, landscape designers trained by apprenticing—such as
André Le Nôtre, who apprenticed with his father before designing the
Gardens of Versailles—to accomplished masters in the field, with the titular name varying and reputation paramount for a career. The professional section of garden designers in Europe and the Americas went by the name "Landscape Gardener". In the 1890s, the distinct classification of
landscape architect was created, with educational and licensing test requirements for using the title legally.
Beatrix Farrand, the sole woman in the founding group, refused the title, preferring Landscape Gardener. Matching the client and technical needs of a project, and the appropriate practitioner with talent, legal qualifications, and experienced skills, surmounts title nomenclature. Institutional education in landscape design appeared in the early 20th century. Over time, it became available at various levels. Ornamental horticulture programs with design components are offered at community colleges and universities within
schools of agriculture or horticulture, with some beginning to offer garden or landscape design certificates and degrees. Departments of landscape architecture are located within university schools of architecture or
environmental design, with undergraduate and graduate degrees offered. Specialties and minors are available in horticultural botany,
horticulture,
natural resources,
landscape engineering,
construction management,
fine and
applied arts, and
landscape design history. Traditionally, hand-drawn drawings documented the design and position of features for construction, but
Landscape design software is frequently used now. Other routes of training are through informal apprenticeships with practicing landscape designers, landscape architects, landscape contractors, gardeners, nurseries, and garden centers, and docent programs at botanical and public gardens. Since the landscape designer title does not have a college degree or licensing requirements to be used, there is a very wide range of sophistication, aesthetic talent, technical expertise, and specialty strengths to be responsibly matched with specific client and project requirements. ==Gardening==