So many magazines that have disappeared in the past few years. One of the ones I miss the most is House and Garden. Dominique Browning was its editor from 2002 until 2007 when it was shuttered. Her wonderful blog Slow Love Life is worth the read. It’s a personal journal of savoring life and slowing down enough to enjoy and rediscover the things she likes, does and experiences. There are thoughtful and intimate remembrances and ideas, beautiful images, and even recipes. I like the sheer joy (and sometimes sadness) of it. Try it and see if you do too.
Some links to recent posts with an image from that post…
It’s the end of August. I have a reading tradition that goes all the way back to ancient personal history in fact. When I was 10 my father brought me home a copy of Harpers Bazaar from his job. Before that, my only magazine reading experience was National Geographic. Since that time I have been a voracious reader of fashion magazines. All design in my way of thinking is intertwined–have you heard of the slow fashion movement for example? The same ideas that are happening in slow food are spilling over into other disciplines so as a self avowed inspiration junkie, I look outside myself and my discipline.
In August, the big September issues are published–pages and pages of articles on travel, culture, books and of course fashion. Sure it’s not realistic for most of us, but in the dog days of summer with the fall fast approaching it’s nice to do a little dreaming. So here’s what I’m reading this week…
The BIG Bazaar
The BIG Vogue
And no, I won’t be wearing 5″ stillettos anytime now or in the future. And if you want to watch a great and thoroughly entertaining documentary, try The September Issue.
I’m going to start off by saying that hackers suck. Miss R has been down for a week due to malicious attacks and is now back fortified and healthy. Thank you for your patience. Now onward.
I’ve written about Dig It! before…when two of my gardens were profiled in it.
This cool garden zine has been around for 7 or 8 years. Its focus is the mid-Atlantic states, but the content is interesting enough for readers everywhere. Editor Mary Jasch seeks out the sublime, the practical and the accessible for Dig It! readers. The layout is different than most online publications–its format has been largely unchanged since the beginning. Straightforward without the bells and whistles of faux turning pages, copy is in the center and photos are along the right side to be enlarged at the reader’s click. It gives Dig It! a gravity that many ‘eye candy’ journals don’t have.
Every year about this time I get the urge to drive to the beach. The waves of the Atlantic Ocean, the cool breezes and the sand between my toes calms and rejuvenates me. I ran across these images of the sand works of Jim Denevan and wanted to share them–his work was previously unknown to me…they are the beach and so much more.
This one’s pretty eclectic. I’ve culled some garden design related images from Erin Loechner’s Design For Mankind who culls them from everywhere. Links back to the original source are on every post. It’s a fast and furious inspirational blog with multiple entries each day 5 days a week which is why it’s in my reader–no way can I keep up.
Most posts are a single image and a short statement. Pulling ideas from everywhere, there can be a lack of focus and sometimes things are just plain silly. But there is so much offered up that it is a funhouse of random inspiration that takes very little time to absorb and move on…perfect for those with a short attention span. It’s also an incredibly popular site with more than 12,000 hits daily.
Lace Tree
New Zealand's Fox Glacier
Living Art?
Vegetarian's Purse?
Confetti Garden
In case you missed them…here’s links to a few of the previous ‘In my Reader’ posts: ArchDaily, Vulgare, and last week’s The Good Garden. Enjoy!
A quick trip to Vulgare is often all I need to get a shot of inspiration. Written by Thomas Barbey in collaboration with Olivier Cazin, this blog is a eclectic cornucopia of images and ideas of landscapes and the natural world from everywhere. There’s almost no text and the images and what they post is not all new. What they are is challenging, and there’s not enough of that on-line with regards to gardens and garden design.
From serious to silly here are some recent entries that have caught my eye. Click the image to go to that post.
Danish Allotment gardens
Eliptical allotment gardens in Denmark c. 1952
The full post shows conceptual drawings and more photographs. Who says allotments and community gardens have to be rectangular?
Paving Pattern in the Netherlands
Graphic examples of paving always inspire me to experiment on walkways and patios. A simple image can jump start my process.
Burl on an Oak
Holy Quercus burl Batman!
Aerial view of Parque de Las Llamas in Spain, c. 2007
This post has multiple images of the park as built and is worth a longer look than I have room to post here.
Some silliness
Just because life’s too short to be serious all the time.
Last Sunday, I spent the afternoon beating the 90+ degree heat immersed in what is believed is the best of design thought now.
‘Why Design Now?’ the 2010 triennial survey of all things design at the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum covers the past three years and like any good survey is both in the moment and in the future. Global in scope, sustainability was the ‘in the moment’ theme–both in many of the pieces but also in the installation itself. Backlash against technology was a future theme with handmade and one of a kind pieces that showed a clear direction away from global computer driven design and towards a celebration of localization of resources, design and culture.
This dichotomy of thought -high tech vs. low tech – wasn’t totally driven by economics, but the two most extreme examples of each were. Masdar City currently being built in Abu Dhabi aims to be the first totally sustainable, zero carbon footprint city in the world. The scope of the project is incredible and a testament to what piles of money can do.
Masdar City
In the same gallery was the most low tech design. The Pearl Millet thresher. This simple machine greatly reduces the time it takes to separate Pearl Millet grains from the stem. The materials are available locally and the thresher is simple to build and operate.
With the exception of urban farming projects, I was disappointed in the lack of landscape design represented in the show. In 2006 Cao|Perot, Field Operations and Ken Smith were well represented and in this go around, most of the design ideas involving landscape were collaborative so you had to dig (no pun intended) to find them. A notable exception was a post Katrina community garden project that will have even more resonance in the wake of the BP gulf oil disaster. Viet Village Urban Farm is not only an incredible project, but the graphics used to show it in the gallery were low-tech and innovative at the same time. Not allowed to take pictures, you’ll have to trust me when I say the that the collaged, cut and paste from strips of photographs farm plan was one of the most beautiful I’ve ever seen.
With that said, there were so many ideas in that it’s impossible to process them all in one visit. Here are just a few of them–some suitable for landscape and garden…some just because they were great design.
Sole solar roof tiles
I love the idea of solar energy, but hate the panels. Here’s an elegant solution…Sole power roof tiles. Now to figure out a style that’s not based on Spanish architecture…
Invisible Street light
Korean designer, Jongoh Lee designed this light which uses a ‘host’ tree, stores energy during the day and does it’s work after dark. Brilliant.
Chair by Jetske de Groot
In my opinion, much of the most interesting design in the show was Dutch. Jetske de Groot builds furniture from disparate parts–and then celebrates the process via colored epoxy joints. On her website is an excellent re-purposed resin lawn chair back.
SolPix wall
I just want this, but imagine the technology smaller on a back garden wall. GreenPix Zero Energy media wall.
I could add more, more, more, but the most surprising of all doesn’t have an image–again because photos weren’t allowed in the gallery. My face, via my Twitter avatar was front and center on the live Twitter feed because I had used 140 to say I was going and include the hashtag #triennial. That will probably be the closest I get to being in the triennial…
This is the first in a series about what I read and how it influences my design work. Posts will likely be link rich, so feel free to explore much of the same material and see if it inspires you too. I post regularly on Monday and Wednesday (with sporadic bursts in between) so for the foreseeable future Friday will be in the mix. Isn’t summer the time to catch up on your reading anyway?
Since then it’s been lingering in the back of my mind as possible inspiration for a garden–not one for harsh light either. These colors would disappear in clear bright light.
Since I’m hands on, I went to two of my go to websites–Colourlovers and Image Spark–to explore the possibilities for myself. Both are fast and intuitive–the entire process was less than an hour combined. I’ve discussed both before, but since this is about inspiration I think they deserve a second look.
Ultimately this exercise strayed away from ‘nude’ and morphed into something I called Blush. Here’s a color palette that I fooled around with on Colourlovers.
Blush
and an inspiration I played with board on Image Spark.
Blush
Every now and again it’s good to stretch and PLAY with something just because.
For those of you have been reading Miss R for a while, you know how I am constantly on the hunt for inspiration for my garden and landscape design work. You also probably have figured out that I am a lifelong voracious reader of everything–newspapers, blogs, books, cereal boxes–even Miss R is named after a heroine in a book. I read serious tomes not as often as I probably should, but also magazines of every sort, trashy novels, gardening books, biographies and even The Star in the grocery aisle. I am curious about many things except vampires.
So starting this Friday for a while, with In My Reader I’m going to share exactly that…what I’m reading and looking at (sometimes it’s all about the pictures). New and old favorites, blogs, websites and other on-line resources along side books, articles and other printed (yes printed on paper) materials that I use and find in this process. As a warning though…it might take a while to connect the dots…I have a busy mind and a sometimes a short attention span. Please stop by and let me know what you think…
As a preview of things to come…today at 1 pm EST pick up links from the Garden Designers Roundtable. I am a contributing member, but I’m not posting on this month’s topic ‘Small Spaces’.
The solstice is on Sunday so I’m celebrating with inspiration for sun colored gardens. Last year I honored it with images of the sun.
Palette created on colourlovers.com
I find yellow to be the most difficult color to use outside of plants–there are some really great yellow blooming and yellow foliage plants btw. Yellow never fades into the background unless it’s with other yellows or in a cacophony of brights–and that’s the challenge.
Parasol
Bouquet
Hakonechloa macra ‘All Gold’
Gold Finch
Field of mustard
Echinacea x ‘Big Sky Sunrise’
Door
Cercis canadensis ‘Hearts of Gold’
Adirondack Chair
Coreopsis ‘Moonbeam’
All Stars
Enjoy the sun, it will be December before you know it! If it rains, just grab your yellow slicker and be your own sun…