Landscape design photography in Tucson requires more then documenting a finished space, it requires an understanding of season, light, and intention. This private mid‑century home in the Catalina Foothills was photographed in late fall, a deliberate choice made in collaboration with award-winning landscape architect designer Elizabeth Przygoda of Box Hill Design, to capture the landscape at its most expressive.
By waiting until November, when the desert light softens and Muhlenbergia capillaris grasses bloom in clouds of pink along the poolside, the final imagery reflects the landscape as it was designed to be experienced: complete, settled, and alive within its environment.




This photography session focused on documenting the completion of a thoughtfully layered desert landscape, one where architecture, hardscape, and planting work together in quiet balance.
At the center of the property, an Olympic‑length pool stretches across the site, newly re‑tiled and restored as both a functional anchor and visual axis. Its long, reflective surface mirrors the expansive Arizona sky, reinforcing the clean geometry of the home’s mid‑century architecture. Nearby, an outdoor shower extends the rhythm of daily life outdoors, blurring the line between interior and landscape.
A built‑in fire pit introduces warmth and counterpoint, offering a place of gathering and pause. As daylight fades, it becomes a soft focal glow against the cool precision of stone and water.






The success of this landscape reveals itself in moments rather than statements.
Custom metal gates, both functional and sculptural, guide movement through the property. Their dark, tactile presence creates contrast against the pale stone and desert plantings, reinforcing a sense of arrival and transition.
An oversized cast‑stone sculpture anchors the garden with weight and restraint. Positioned with intention, it offers a visual pause, an object that invites stillness as the eye moves across water, grass, and sky. Its materiality feels timeless, as though it has always belonged to the site.



Timing was everything for this project.
In late fall, the Muhlenbergia capillaris grasses reach their brief but striking bloom, their feathery plumes catching light and wind along the pool’s edge. Photographing during this window allowed the landscape to express its full character, softening the strong lines of the hardscape and introducing movement, texture, and rhythm.
These mass plantings bring a sense of quiet drama to the space. Against the stillness of water and stone, they remind us that landscapes are living systems, shaped as much by time as by design.




For Box Hill Design, this project was never about a single moment, but about how the landscape settles into place, how materials weather, plantings mature, and architecture and environment begin to speak the same language.
Our role was to document that conversation with patience and clarity. In the Sonoran Desert, where seasonality is subtle but deeply meaningful, waiting for the right moment is essential. This Catalina Foothills project is a reflection of that belief: that the most honest photographs are made when a space is truly ready to be seen.

Fletcher and Co specializes in landscape design photography and architectural photography throughout the Southwest and beyond, documenting thoughtfully crafted spaces with care, and respect for process.
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