|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Garden design & planning
Celebrate and recreate the beauty of The Ruth Bancroft Garden! Ruth
Bancroft is a dry gardening pioneer. Her lifelong love of plants
led to the creation of one of the most acclaimed public gardens,
The Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, California. The Bold Dry
Garden offers unparalleled access to the garden and the
extraordinary woman responsible for it. In its stunningly
photographed pages, you'll discover the history of the garden and
the design principles and plant palette that make it unique. Packed
with growing and maintenance tips, profiles of signature plants for
a dry garden, and innovative design techniques, The Bold Dry Garden
has everything you need to create a garden that is lush, water
wise, and welcoming.
'Designer Matt Keightley's first book is a thing of beauty and a
valuable source of design inspiration - a stylish guide to a
stylish garden.' - Gardens Illustrated Do you want your outdoor
space to look as stylish and as well designed as your home? RHS
Design Outdoors will give you the ideas and know-how you need to
make that happen. Award-winning designer Matt Keightley has curated
a collection of 35 gardens, created either by him or by other
leading contemporary designers, that will provide the inspiration
to transform your outdoor space. Gardeners features include
award-winning designers Jo Thompson, Tom Stuart Smith, Tony Woods,
Charlotte Rowe and Andrew Wilson. For each case study there is a
detailed plan, information on the plants and materials used and a
wealth of gorgeous photography by leading garden photographer
Marianne Majerus. The designs are organized into five categories:
Showstoppers at Home - high-design concepts that are nonetheless
achievable; Family-friendly - gardens that incorporate play areas
and socialising; Minimalist - spaces with larger areas of hard
landscaping and bold, restrained planting; Plants First - gardens
where more than half of the outdoor space is planted; and Other
Spaces - roof terraces, basement areas and front gardens. This wide
array of garden styles means that there is inspiration for all
types of garden, and for all types of gardener.
Inspirational, practical, and easy to use, this book was created
with the aim of conveying the awesome diversity and beauty of
California's native plants and demonstrating how they can be
brought into ecologically sound, attractive, workable, and artful
gardens. Structured around major California plant communities -
bluffs, redwoods, the Channel Islands, coastal scrub, grasslands,
deserts, oak woodlands, mixed evergreen woodlands, riparian,
chaparral, mountain meadows, and wetlands - the book's twelve
chapters each include sample plans for a native garden design
accompanied by original drawings, color photographs, a plant list,
tips on successful gardening with individual species, and more.
Both residential and professional gardeners will learn the benefits
of going native with gardens that require less water and fewer
fertilizers, attract wildlife, engage the senses, create a sense of
place, and, at the same time, preserve our rich natural heritage.
"Designing Native California Gardens" includes: more than 600
selected native species recommended for the garden; more than 300
photographs of native plants, natural plant communities, and
residential native gardens; and, recommended places to visit for
viewing each plant community.
Whether looking to landscape a new property or revive and polish a
tired one, Create an Impression, is the first book in an innovative
new landscapig series. The focus is on the front yard and features
23 professionally designed, easy-to-create landscape plans using
commonly available plants.
Leberecht Migge (1881-1935) was one of the most innovative
landscape architects of the early 20th century. With work ranging
from large urban parks to housing settlements with allotment
gardens, he sought to create functional green spaces that would not
only meet the environmental challenges of the industrial metropolis
but also improve the social conditions of modern life. The
nationalistic rhetoric of 'Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century'
marks it as a political tract of the late Kaiserreich, and its deep
influence within the Siedlung communities of the Weimar era attests
to its lasting cultural impact.
'A thoroughly recommended read if you want your garden to have that
designer touch - and to look good all year round' - Alan Titchmarsh
'This book is reassuringly methodical. From the initial survey to
the planting palette and how to design for privacy, shelter or
noise control. It's a helpful primer for any design project.' -
Daily Mail 'Inventively presented with a lot of info packed in
without seeming deterrently difficult.' - Evening Standard 'Great
design tips, ideas and planting schemes for year-round interest.' -
House Beautiful Confused by the bewildering range of plants on
offer at your local garden centre? How do you choose, use and
create beautiful planting schemes like the professionals? The book
takes you on a structured journey through the design process, from
the initial assessment of your existing space, through choosing a
theme or style, to putting it all together. Learn what various
plant groups can provide and how to problem-solve by selecting the
right species. Understand the role that form, colour, scent and
texture play in the garden, and how to use focal points and accent
plants for added interest. Tiny courtyard gardeners and suburban
gardeners alike will learn how to mix plants in pleasing
combinations that will provide interest through the seasons and
last for years. RHS How to Plant a Garden proves that a good
planting scheme can transform your garden from the ordinary to the
truly inspirational.
Women Garden Designers presents twenty-seven of the most important
and influential women garden designers and their gardens from
around the world, showing both their finest commissions as well as
the gardens they designed for themselves, in their own space. The
carefully researched text examines their influences and their
legacy to garden design. Beginning with the remarkable Gertrude
Jekyll and Beatrix Farrand, who were working simultaneously, though
on different sides of the Atlantic, the book then moves on into the
20th century, featuring international designers as diverse as
Florence Yoch - who created gardens for film sets and for glamorous
Hollywood homes - and Vita Sackville-West - whose regular gardening
column in the Observer, along with her own garden at Sissinghurst,
influenced those in Britain. In Australia, Edna Walling
supplemented her income from her practice with regular articles in
life-style magazines. Increasingly with picture-led articles,
designers found a way to publicise and advertise their work, thus
gaining new clients in emancipated women who were in a position to
place their own commissions.Women designers were more likely and
quicker to embrace the ecological garden movement particularly in
Germany and Sweden in the middle of the 20th century. They are
represented by Herta Hammerbacher and Rosemary Weisse, who created
the glorious perennial plantings in Munich's West Park and Ulla
Bodorff in Sweden, as well as Isabelle Greene in California with
her dry native plantings. The modern movement includes Monica Gora
and Topher Delaney, for whom spirituality and landscape as works of
art are important. The more conventional structured approach is
represented by Penelope Hobhouse and Rosemary Verey, who began
creating gardens later in their lives, following motherhood. Haruko
Seki from Japan and Isabel du Prat from Brazil express their own
special cultural qualities in their trans-global practices.
Text in English and German. The architect and photographer Rolf
Reiner Maria Borchard, who is professor of design principles at the
Muthesius-Hochschule in Kiel, has chosen seven of the most
beautiful gardens and photographed them during several trips,
always in spring, in other words at a time when the garden
architecture has not yet been overwhelmed by the vegetation, and so
can make the best possible impact in the image. His trained eye for
the way architecture is embedded in the landscape means that he has
found striking and convincing images, steeped in the harmony of the
gardens.
This book examines the ideal of wilderness preservation in the United States from the antebellum era to the first half of the twentieth century, showing how the early conception of the wilderness as the place where Indians lived (or should live) gave way to the idealization of uninhabited wilderness. It focuses on specific policies of Indian removal developed at Yosemite, Yellowstone, and Glacier national parks from the early 1870s to the 1930s.
A fascinating look at the life, influences, techniques and works of
18th-century landscape gardener Lancelot 'Capability' Brown. His
transformation of unpromising countryside into beautiful parks
changed the face of a nation and created a landscape style which
for many of us defines the English countryside. One of the most
remarkable men of the 18th century, Lancelot 'Capability' Brown was
known to many as 'The Omnipotent Magician' who could transform
unpromising countryside into beautiful parks that seemed to be only
the work of nature. His list of clients included half the House of
Lords, six Prime Ministers and even royalty. Although his fame has
dimmed, we still enjoy many of his works today at National Trust
properties such as Croome Park, Petworth, Berrington, Stowe,
Wimpole, Blenheim Palace, Highclere Castle (location of the ITV
series Downton Abbey) and many more. In Capability Brown, author
and garden historian Sarah Rutherford tells his triumphant story,
uncovers his aims and reveals why he was so successful. Illustrated
throughout with colour photographs of contemporary sites,
historical paintings and garden plans, this is an accessible book
for anyone who wants to know more about the man who changed the
face of the nation and created a landscape style which for many of
us defines the English countryside.
THE BOOK IN 19 WORDS: A CANCER PATIENT DISCOVERS THAT GARDENING IS
GOOD MEDICINE - AND FINDS A POWERFUL HEALING PARTNER IN HER OWN
BACKYARD. Jenny Peterson is a breast cancer survivor. Her long road
through cancer treatment was hard, emotional and often deeply
depressing. The one thing that pulled her out of the darkness was
her desire to be able to garden again. Peterson credits her garden
with clearing her mental fog and overcoming her depression,
physical limitations and pain. The Cancer Survivor's Garden
Companion explores the therapeutic benefits of this vital "earth
connection." With gentle empathy, beautiful photographs and easy
how-to steps, she shows others how to create their own backyard
haven for healing - a personal restorative garden - with a bonus of
well-grounded guidance about diet, exercise, mental focus and
spiritual renewal.
The UK's leading gardening publisher brings you a horticultural
handbook to fulfil your every need and seed! Get your gardening
gloves on and join the green-fingered journey to growing herbs
successfully at home. A must-have volume for first-time gardeners,
Grow Small Gardens has tons of tips and tricks to contains
everything you need to create a garden in a small space, without
compromising on design or beauty. Make the most of your windowsill,
balcony, roof terrace, courtyard, or tiny urban garden with clever
design tricks to create the illusion of more space, advice on
planting to ensure seasonal interest and encourage wildlife, and
detailed aftercare to keep your plants flourishing year after year.
With passion in every page, you can enjoy: - A jargon-free
practical guide to creating a plethora of garden types. - Easy to
follow step-by-step instructions of fundamental gardening
techniques. - The ever-growing pressure of balancing family life
with a career suggests a lot of today's green-fingered gardeners
simply lack the time to care for their gardens. We believe it's
time to change that! Whatever your horticultural hopes may be,
author and editor Zia Allaway brings you a herb-growing guide that
is sure to shape first-time gardeners like never before, full of
top tips to help your garden thrive! An ideal gift for first-time
gardeners, budding botanists or the green-fingered lover in your
life, make sure to get those gardening gloves on, and join the
journey today! At DK, we believe in the power of discovery. If you
like Grow Small Gardens why not try the other titles in our Grow
series? Learn how to brighten your garden all year round with Grow
Bulbs, enjoy a no-fuss guide to container gardening with Grow
Containers or minimise garden waste with Grow Eco-Gardening. Ready,
set, let's grow!
Children love to play in risky-often misunderstood to mean
unsafe-ways. It is often how they learn. Research shows that
activities like climbing on trees and boulders, hiking in nature,
and playing in a creek are excellent ways for kids to develop their
creativity and their senses, because playing outdoors evokes
different sights, sounds, smells, and textures. Letting Play Bloom
analyzes five outstanding case studies of children's nature-based
risky play spaces-the Slide Hill at Governors Island in New York,
the Berkeley (CA) Adventure Playground, and Wildwoods at Fernbank
Museum in Atlanta, as well as sites in the Netherlands and
Australia. Author Lolly Tai provides detailed explanations of their
background and design, and what visitors can experience at each
site. She also outlines the six categories of risky-not
hazardous-play, which involve great heights, rapid speeds,
dangerous tools, dangerous elements, rough-and-tumble play, and
wandering or getting lost. These activities allow children to
explore and challenge themselves (testing their limits) to foster
greater self-worth while also learning valuable risk-management
skills such as dealing with fear-inducing situations. Filled with
more than 200 photographs, Letting Play Bloom advocates for a
thoughtful landscape design process that incorporates the specific
considerations children need to fully experience the thrill that
comes from playing in nature.
|
|