Archive for the ‘Garden Styles’ Category

In my Reader…Slow Love Life

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

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…

Floating Meditation

Farmer’s Market

Paradise Found:  LongHouse Reserve

Goodbye Children

So on this last official weekend of the summer I think I’ll try and capture some of my own slow love life.  Enjoy!

In my Reader…Dig It!

Friday, August 13th, 2010

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.

Here are links to two recent articles, although all of the articles ever published are easily accessible within DigIt!  Thunder Lane:  A Magical Garden and Native Plants – A Living History.

Enjoy!  Miss R will be back on a regular schedule next week.

In my Reader…Recycle UK

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

Every now and again someone will email me and ask me to post something on my blog. I never have…before today. I’m usually fiercely independent and don’t want to have to return the favor.  This was originally sent to me via email.

I have recycler’s guilt.  I still throw away too  much–although considerably less than many of my neighbors if our weekly trash bags are counted.  Although the site itself is similar to the US freecycle sites, this infographic  from England is really worth the read.  Click on it,  it will be enlarged and readable.  Thanks, Claire at recycle UK.

Recycling

Infographic by Recycle – Don’t bin it, recycle it

Miss R was a victim…

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

…of malicious hackers and so was down for a day.   It has been fixed and the reports sent to Google.  It has also been armed with fancy new malware protections.  I apologize for any inconvenience or worry it may have caused you.

Sandy Beaches

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

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.

In my Reader…Design for Mankind

Friday, July 30th, 2010

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: ArchDailyVulgare, and last week’s  The Good Garden.  Enjoy!

Grounds for Sculpture

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Last Sunday I met up with a group of my peers from APLDNJ for a summer social and private tour of Grounds for Sculpture.  I hadn’t been in a few years, so enough time had passed for me to see it with ‘new’ eyes.  The day was blazing, the company was stimulating and as always the sculpture park was a mix of high and low, weird and wonderful and outside the box thinking.

Over 250 large and small scale sculptures are on the grounds, many in their own ‘garden’ spaces.  What has always fascinated me about the park is the way plants, landscape forms and elements are used.  They are an integral part of the experience.

Picea abies 'Pendula'

Two Picea abies ‘Pendula’ form a living arch that frames the view of  a highly polished steel sculpture just beyond it on a walkway.

Undulating walk

One of two walkways with Corten supported turf ‘waves’.

Gabion Wall

This gabion wall supports a suspended bridge.  It could have simply been filled with rip rap, but instead it is a sculptural wall that forms the backdrop of an amphitheater.

Red Maple Allee

Nowhere in the park are plants used in a more arresting way than this allee of red maples.  They were dug and planted as young trees in groups that had already formed.  They are pruned up so their trunks form a living fence and the effect is highly sculptural.

Courtyard

The stone and steel sculptural piece in the foreground is entitled Grupo and is by Pat Musick.

Water Feature

Courtyards

I kept on thinking about Luis Barragan in this series of courtyards.

J. Seward Johnson, the park’s visionary philanthropist is also a sculptor and his work is throughout the park.  He creates vignettes of life-sized characters doing things.  The most famous are recreations of paintings by the French impressionist painters in 3-D.  I find them hilarious…none more than this one of Monet’s Woman with a Parasol on a hill of grasses and plastic poppies…yes plastic.

Fake Poppies et al.

And because this is a sculpture park I’ll show you my favorite non-plant piece (Hearts Desire by Gloria Vanderbilt) which is new to the park since I was last there and was in the ‘Garden of the Subconscious’–a meandering space formed with weeping pines and spruces.

Kewpie dolls in Hell (not it's real name)

Go if you can, it’s worth the trip.

Bollywood and Vine

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

It’s hot, really hot and humid in New Jersey.  As a matter of fact it’s hot in most of the United States, so I went looking for some hot inspiration.

I want color, glamour and fun.  Where did I look to to escape from the heat?  Bollywood!

Bollywood film still

Aishwarya Rai - Bollywood's biggest star

I found inspiration for shade from The India Garden Company.

I found inspiration for shelter at the Raj Tents.

Maybe not exactly Bollywood, but I also found inspiration in Diwali lanterns–because it cools down after dark!

Some day I will actually get to go to India and see this for myself, but for now there’s Bollywood movies and some arm chair travel to inspire me.

A Tale of Two Fences…

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

One of the big benefits of having a visual memory is that I frequently connect images that have only a tenuous relationship to each other.

These urban fences are almost 3000 miles apart.  Both are extraordinary designs.  Both stand on land that was once wasted.  One has had civic support, the other community support. I saw them almost exactly a year apart.  I knew as soon as I saw the second one that I wanted to see them together, so I’m indulging my whim.

Portland 2009–Tanner Springs Park–Undulating Steel Fence

One of three city parks planned in 1999 by Peter Walker Associates, Tanner Spring Park is controversial.  It reclaimed industrial wasteland and restored the original stream and wetland environment in an otherwise urban environment.  Some residents don’t see it as very ‘parklike’.

The outside of the fence at Tanner Springs Park

Insets in the fence panels

Inside the park

Reclaiming industrial wasteland

Buffalo 2010–Urban Roots Cooperative Garden Center–Totemic Concrete Fence

This fence is on the boundary of what will be a contemporary park on 18th Street and Rhode Island Street in Buffalo, NY and is largely being built through volunteer efforts.  The fence was created with the help of a New York State Council of the Arts grant and the park will be a balm in an otherwise gritty urban neighborhood.  Urban Roots the only cooperative garden center in the country, shares the fence with the park.

Outside of the garden center

Fence Detail

Fence Gate with sculptural bench

Urban Roots Cooperative Garden Center



In my Reader…Vulgare

Friday, July 16th, 2010

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.