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Books > Gardening > Gardens (descriptions, history etc)
Almost 100 authentic dishes recall in food and drink the true
flavours of Ireland. It includes classic recipes such as baked
salmon and soda bread stand alongside the Irish specialities of
Tyrone roast goose and carrageen jelly. Numerous fish and vegetable
recipes are complemented by a diverse range of traditional cakes,
puddings and centuries-old folk remedies. This is a charming and
practical souvenir of Irish life.
![Finlaystone (Paperback): George MacMillan, John MacMillan, Judy Hutton, David MacMillan, Andrew MacMillan, Arthur MacMillian](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/3498611835389179215.jpg) |
Finlaystone
(Paperback)
George MacMillan, John MacMillan, Judy Hutton, David MacMillan, Andrew MacMillan, Arthur MacMillian
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R978
Discovery Miles 9 780
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The illustrated biography of a Scottish country house, set beside
the River Clyde, and of the people who made it their home over the
past 850 years Written by four brothers, their sister and the
eldest member of the next generation, Finlaystone offers an
insidersa view of the house, its beautiful gardens and the
surrounding estate. They tell about the lives of its former owners,
many of whom played prominent roles in Scottish military,
political, religious and cultural affairs. As Scotland moved
forward from centuries of feuds between large feudal landowners to
the reformation, the age of enlightenment and the industrial
revolution, the building evolved from a fortress to a modest but
attractive family home in 1746. Its present form as an imposing
late Victorian mansion dates from when it was modernised and
extended in 1900 by George Jardine Kidston, the great-grandfather
of the older authors, who had grown wealthy from running one of the
worlda s earliest steamship companies. In its hey-day, Finlaystone
was managed for the comfort and leisure of its owners by a bevy of
household servants living in a wing of the house, and by an army of
workers, including gardeners, foresters, game-keepers, joiners and
a laundry-maid. The prosperity that had made such a lavish life
possible, however, soon started to decline, with George Kidstona s
death in 1909, followed just 5 years later by war, the economic
depression in the 1930s, and then World War II. Unlike many other
large country houses, Finlaystone remains a family home, kept
afloat largely by the hard work and adaptability of the members of
the family who reflect in this book on the joys and travails that
this implied.
'Paradise haunts gardens', writes Derek Jarman, 'and it haunts
mine.' Jarman's public image is that of a film-maker of genius,
whose work, dwelling on themes of sexuality and violence, became a
byword for controversy. But the private man was the creator of his
own garden-paradise in an environment that many might think was
more of a hell than a heaven - in the flat, bleak, often desolate
expanse of shingle that faces the Dungeness nuclear power station.
Jarman, a passionate gardener from childhood, combined his
painter's eye, his horticultural expertise and his ecological
convictions to produce a landscape which combined the flints,
shells and driftwood of Dungeness; sculptures made from stones, old
tools and found objects; the area's indigenous plants; and shrubs
and flowers introduced by Jarman himself. This book is Derek
Jarman's own record of how this garden evolved, from its earliest
beginnings in 1986 to the last year of his life. More than 150
photographs taken since 1991 by his friend and photographer Howard
Sooley capture the garden at all its different stages and at every
season of the year. Photographs from all angles reveal the garden's
complex geometrical plan, its magical stone circles and its
beautiful and bizarre sculptures. We also catch glimpses of
Jarman's life in Dungeness: walking, weeding, watering, or just
enjoying life. Derek Jarman's Garden is the last book Jarman ever
wrote. Like the garden itself, it remains as a fitting memorial to
a brilliant and greatly loved artist who, against all odds, made a
breathtakingly beautiful garden in the most inhospitable of places.
It will appeal to all those who are themselves practising
gardeners, as well as the legions of admirers of this extraordinary
man.
The enduring appeal of English gardens is beautifully realised by
Clive Nichols, one of Europe's leading garden photographers. From
the green hills of the north to the bleached landscapes of the
south, twenty-eight gardens transport the reader into a timeless,
golden age. Each page is filled with herbaceous borders overflowing
with vibrant flower combinations, kitchen gardens that burgeon with
rows of apple blossom, vegetables and sweet peas, water that
cascades forever into pools and fountains and emerald-green topiary
which frames a vista to a sunlit upland. Many of the finest
landscape architects in England whose work is featured include Emma
Keswick at Rockcliffe Hall, Julianne Fernandez at Tyger Barn, Angel
Collins at Bruern Abbey, Piet Oudolf at Hauser and Wirth and many
more, with text that explains and clarifies their design
sensibilities. This book offers total immersion and sheer delight
for any garden design and photography enthusiast.
This lavish book highlights a selection of the wonderful
illustrations held in the archive of The Florilegium Society at
Sheffield Botanical Gardens. Each illustration included in the book
is accompanied by a plant profile, stating where the plant was
found in the wild and explaining something of its history, uses and
botany. The book also gives an introduction to florilegia dating
from the early herbals, and a history of the Society's Herbarium
and the Gardens themselves. Featuring over 100 colour illustrations
and 67 plant profiles, it is a book for everyone to enjoy, whatever
the season. The Botanical Gardens are in the heart of the City of
Sheffield and are a much-loved venue enjoyed both by the people of
Sheffield and visitors to the City. This book has been written by
the Society's founding chair Valerie Oxley. Valerie developed the
diploma in Botanical Illustration with colleagues at the University
of Sheffield.
Oxford Botanic Garden is the oldest surviving botanic garden in
Britain and has occupied its site in central Oxford since 1621.
Conceived as a place to grow medicinal plants, born in the turmoil
of civil war and nurtured during the restoration of the monarchy,
the garden has, unsurprisingly, a curious past. By tracing the work
and priorities of each of the garden's keepers, this book explores
its importance as one of the world's oldest scientific plant
collections. It tells the story of the planting of the garden by
its first keeper, Jacob Bobart, and his son, together with how they
changed the garden to suit their own needs. The story develops
during the eighteenth century as the garden grew exotic plants
under glass and acquired a fine succulent collection but then
experienced a downturn under the stewardship of the eccentric
Professor Humphrey Sibthorp (famous for giving just one lecture in
thirty-seven years). Finally, the narrative throws light on the
partnership of gardener William Baxter and academic Charles Daubeny
in the early nineteenth century, which gave the garden its
glasshouses and ponds and contributed to its survival to the
present day. This generously illustrated book is the first history
of the garden and arboretum for more than a century and provides an
essential introduction to one of Oxford's much-loved haunts.
The Middle Ages was a time of great upheaval - the period between
the seventh and fourteenth centuries saw great social, political
and economic change. The radically distinct cultures of the
Christian West, Byzantium, Persian-influenced Islam, and al-Andalus
resulted in different responses to the garden arts of antiquity and
different attitudes to the natural world and its artful
manipulation. Yet these cultures interacted and communicated,
trading plants, myths and texts. By the fifteenth century the
garden as a cultural phenomenon was immensely sophisticated and a
vital element in the way society saw itself and its relation to
nature. A Cultural History of Gardens in the Medieval Age presents
an overview of the period with essays on issues of design, types of
gardens, planting, use and reception, issues of meaning, verbal and
visual representation of gardens, and the relationship of gardens
to the larger landscape.
Business Principles for Landscape Contracting, fully revised and
updated in its third edition, is an introduction to the application
of business principles of financial management involved in setting
up your own landscape contracting business and beginning your
professional career. Appealing to students and professionals alike,
it will build your knowledge of financial management tools and
enable you to relate their applications to real-life business
scenarios. Focusing on the importance of proactive financial
management, the book serves as a primer for students in landscape
architecture, contracting, and management courses and entrepreneurs
within the landscape industry preparing to use business principles
in practice. Topics covered include: Financial management and
accountability Budget development Profitable pricing and estimating
Project management Creating a lean culture Personnel management and
employee productivity Professional development Economic
sustainability.
Experiential Landscape offers new ways of looking at the
relationship between people and the outdoor open spaces they use in
their everyday lives. The book takes a holistic view of the
relationship between humans and their environment, integrating
experiential and spatial dimensions of the outdoors, and exploring
the theory and application of environmental design disciplines,
most notably landscape architecture and urban design. The book
explores specific settings in which an experiential approach has
been applied, setting out a vocabulary and methods of application,
and offers new readings of experiential characteristics in site
analysis and design. Offering readers a range of accessible mapping
tools and details of what participative approaches mean in
practice, this is a new, innovative and practical methodology. The
book provides an invaluable resource for students, academics and
practitioners and anyone seeking reflective but practical guidance
on how to approach outdoor place-making or the analysis and design
of everyday outdoor places.
Biophilic Connections and Environmental Encounters in the Urban Age
takes a multi-disciplinary approach, drawing on the authors' wide
range of experience, to provide a greater understanding of the
different dimensions of environmental engagement. It considers the
ways that we interact with our environments, presenting a
comprehensive account of how people negotiate and use the urban
landscape. Set within current debates concerning urban futures,
societal issues, sustainable cities, health and well-being, the
book explores our innate need for contact with the natural world
through biophilic design thinking to expand our knowledge base and
promote a wider understanding of the importance of these
interactions on our collective well-being. It responds to questions
such as, what are the urban qualities that support our well-being?
As an urbanised society what are the environmental determinants
that promote healthy and satisfying lifestyles? Beginning with an
overview of concepts relating to biophilia and environmental
engagement, it moves through current theory and practice, different
pathways and their characteristics, before presenting real world
examples and applications through illustrated case studies in the
UK, USA and across Europe. With a particular focus on the
experience of individuals, the book is essential reading for
students, researchers, and practitioners of architecture, landscape
architecture, urban planning, design and health sciences,
interested in the future of our cities and the importance of green
spaces.
A tour of some of the UK's most beguiling gardens in the counties
of Kent, Sussex and Surrey, the counties that exemplify 'the garden
of England'. In these three counties a wealth of history and
horticulture has combined with geography in the shape of rolling
landscapes, wooded valleys and meandering waterways, to provide an
attractive and fascinating collection. They are in villages and
towns, as well as in deep countryside, and all are privately owned.
Some have been in the possession of the same family for many
generations, while others have recently been transformed by new
owners. Some open for the National Garden Scheme, while others are
open privately and in some cases for just the occasional day for
charity. The stunning gardens explored in this visually rich guide
include: Arundel Castle, Denmans, Gravetye Manor, Munstead Wood and
Sussex Prairie Garden. The book also includes a gazetteer of other
important gardens in the area with location advice, to enable
readers to plan a more elaborate tour of this fertile garden area.
Filled with stunning, specially commissioned photographs by Clive
Boursnell, Secret Gardens of the South East is a unique guide that
opens the gates to the most intriguing gardens in this part of
England.
This book provides an empirical analysis of the concept of play as
a form of spatial practice in urban public spaces. The introduced
City-Play-Framework (CPF) is a practical urban analysis tool that
allows urban designers, landscape architects and researchers to
develop a shared awareness when opening up this window of
possibility for adventure. Two case studies substantiate and
illustrate the development process and testing of the framework in
Canberra, Australia, and Potsdam, Germany. The appropriation of
public spaces that transcend boundaries can facilitate an intrinsic
connection between people and their immediate environment, towards
a more joyful ontological state of human existence in which
imagination, co-creation and a sense of agency are key elements of
the design approach. The framework presents an alternative
understanding of public spaces and public life, reflecting on
theory and its implications for practice in a post-pandemic world
in dense urban centres. A bridge between theory and practice, this
book explores possibilities on what future design ought to be when
openness and ambiguity are consciously integrated parts of practice
and process. The book presents a valuable discussion on public
space and play for academic audiences across a wide range of
disciplines such as landscape architecture, urban design, planning,
architecture and urban sociology, which is informative for future
practice.
The definitive guide to hundreds of Britain's most outstanding
gardens, in the care of the National Trust The National Trust has
the finest collection of gardens in the United Kingdom. In this
book, Stephen Lacey paints a vivid picture of the individual
gardens, and places each one in its context within British
horticultural history. All the major periods and styles of garden
design are represented, from the formality of early gardens such as
Hanbury Hall and Ham House, magnificent 18th-century landscapes
like Stowe and Croome Park and the heady Victorian creations of
Biddulph Grange and Waddesdon Manor to the famous plantsmen's
gardens of the last century, such as Nymans, Hidcote Manor and
Sissinghurst Castle. The text and pictures have been fully updated,
with new entries including Allan Bank, High Close Arboretum and
Wentworth Castle. Several gardens have undergone major
redevelopment since the previous edition, while others have
colourfully expanded the acreage open to visitors. Extensive tree
planting, including reinstating a lost eighteenth-century avenue at
Dyrham Park and recreating the pear tree arch at Rudyard Kipling's
home, Bateman's, are just a few of the new and exciting additions
to this classic guide to Britain's most outstanding gardens.
Following on from the ground-breaking first edition, which received
the 2014 EDRA Achievement Award, this fully updated text includes
new chapters on current issues in the built environment, such as
GIS and mapping, climate change, and qualitative approaches. Place
attachments are powerful emotional bonds that form between people
and their physical surroundings. They inform our sense of identity,
create meaning in our lives, facilitate community, and influence
action. Place attachments have bearing on such diverse issues as
rootedness and belonging, placemaking and displacement, mobility
and migration, intergroup conflict, civic engagement, social
housing and urban redevelopment, natural resource management, and
global climate change. In this multidisciplinary book, Manzo and
Devine-Wright draw together the latest thinking by leading scholars
from around the globe, including contributions from scholars such
as Daniel Williams, Mindy Fullilove, Randy Hester, and David
Seamon, to capture significant advancements in three main areas:
theory, methods, and applications. Over the course of fifteen
chapters, using a wide range of conceptual and applied methods, the
authors critically review and challenge contemporary knowledge,
identify significant advances, and point to areas for future
research. This important volume offers the most current
understandings about place attachment, a critical concept for the
environmental social sciences and placemaking professions.
Forget tired rows of carnations interspersed with a few clumped
impatiens: these stunning "New Tech" layouts redefine what a garden
can be! Award-winning designer Paul Cooper presents the best
contemporary garden designs from all around the world. From the
innovative to the controversial, this unique collection features
kinetic, portable, and radical gardens that defy convention. Using
distressed concrete, stainless steel, elastic netting, and other
man-made materials interspersed with lush plantings, these
distinctive plans provide unexpected visuals and rich textures that
challenge perceived notions of landscape design. More than 140
color photographs and numerous garden plans make this an ideal
sourcebook for professional landscapers and adventurous home
gardeners alike.
Gardening is an age-old craft, steeped in mystique and peppered
with handed-down wisdom, often derived from 'sons of the soil' who
grew larger cabbages than their neighbours. This fact-drenched and
beautifully illustrated insight into gardening history with enthral
you with its diversity - from digging soil and keeping bees to
early plant hunters and weather rhymes. A perfect gift for
gardening enthusiasts!
In the era of the Anthropocene, site matters are more pressing than
ever. Building on the concepts, theories, and multi-disciplinary
approaches raised in the first edition, this publication strives to
address the changes that have taken place over the last 15 years
with new material to complement and re-position the initial volume.
Reaching across design disciplines, this highly illustrated
anthology assembles essays from architects, landscape architects,
urban designers, planners, historians, and artists to explore ways
to physically and conceptually engage site. Thoughtful discourse
and empirically grounded pieces combine to provide the language and
theory to contextualize the meanings of site in the built
environment. The increasingly complex hybridity of constructed
environments today demands new tools for thinking about and working
with site. Drawing contributions from outside and within the
traditional design disciplines, this edition will trace important
developments in site thinking with new essays on topics such as
climate change, landscape as infrastructure, shifts from global to
planetary urbanization debates, and the proliferation of
participatory site transformation practices. Edited by two leading
practitioners and academics, Site Matters juxtaposes timeless
contributions from individuals including Elizabeth Meyer, Robert
Beauregard, and Robin Dripps with original new writings from Peter
Marcuse, Jane Wolff, Neil Brenner, and Thaisa Way, amongst others,
to recontextualize and reignite the debate around site. An ideal
text for students, academics, and researchers interested in site
and design theory.
Paris Park Photographs features spectacular images from a dozen
public parks and gardens in and near France's capital city.
Exploring many of the same places that photographer Eugene Atget
(1857-1927) made famous a century ago, Michael Kolster references
the pleasures and pitfalls of wandering alone amongst trees and
plants and sculpture, unkempt and formally designed places,
tempered by the knowledge that the modern world with all its
congestion is only a few short steps away. These intimate yet
inherently expansive views of Paris's parks invite closer scrutiny
of the encounters awaiting us at the edges of the well-worn paths
defining our daily lives. Few people venture into the frame of
Kolster's photographs, but the promise of a renewed sense of hope
and community resides in the details of his visual encounters and
the moments of his heightened attention. Each picture speaks to us
as a moment in time, even as the sequence suggests a choreography
of place, one that can vary daily along with the changing moods and
light of each park. Paris Park Photographs is presented in a
bilingual English/French edition and concludes with an afterword by
Michelle Kuo. Of note is how the book's design is inspired by
Walker Evans's 1938 classic work, American Photographs, making
Kolster's book of immediate interest to photo and book collectors.
The newly revised and updated Charleston: A Bloomsbury House &
Garden is the definitive publication on the Bloomsbury Group's
rural outpost in the heart of the Sussex Downs. "It's absolutely
perfect...", wrote the artist Vanessa Bell when she moved to
Charleston in 1916. For fifty years, Vanessa and her fellow painter
Duncan Grant lived, loved and worked in this isolated Sussex
farmhouse, together transforming the house and garden into an
extraordinary work of art and creating a rural retreat for the
Bloomsbury group. Now, Vanessa's son, Quentin Bell, and her
granddaughter Virginia Nicholson tell the inside story of their
family home, linking it with some of the pioneering cultural
figures who spent time there, including Vanessa's sister Virginia
Woolf, the economist Maynard Keynes, the writer Lytton Strachey and
the art critic Roger Fry. Taking readers through each room of the
house - from Clive Bell's Study, the Dining Room, the Kitchen and
the Garden Room, through to individual bedrooms, the Studios and
the Library - Quentin Bell relives old memories, including having
T.S. Eliot over for a dinner party and staging plays in the Studio,
while Virginia Nicholson details the artistic techniques
(stencilling, embroidery, painting, sculpture, ceramics and more)
used to embellish and enliven the once simple farmhouse. In this
refreshed edition of the original 1997 publication, Gavin
Kingcombe's specially commissioned photographs breathe life into
the colourful interiors and garden of the Sussex farmhouse, while
updated text and captions by Virginia Nicholson capture the
evolution of Charleston as it continues to inspire a new
generation. For lovers of literature, decorative arts, and all
things Bloomsbury, Charleston: A Bloomsbury House & Garden
offers a window onto a truly unique creative hub.
Walled kitchen gardens were found in the grounds of most large
country houses in Britain and Ireland. They were designed to
provide a continual supply of fruit, flowers and vegetables. With
the aide of heated glasshouses, there would be out-of-season
delicacies such as strawberries for Christmas, exotic tropical
fruits, figs and grapes. The remains of these gardens can still be
seen, some converted to other uses, some simply abandoned; a few
have been restored to their previous productiveness. This book
examines the history of these old kitchen gardens in the light of
what might be seen there today.
For centuries, the English Lake District has been renowned as an
important cultural, sacred and literary landscape. It is therefore
surprising that there has so far been no in-depth critical
examination of the Lake District from a tourism and heritage
perspective. Bringing together leading writers from a wide range of
disciplines, this book explores the tourism history and heritage of
the Lake District and its construction as a cultural landscape from
the mid eighteenth century to the present day. It critically
analyses the relationships between history, heritage, landscape,
culture and policy that underlie the activities of the National
Park, Cumbria Tourism and the proposals to recognise the Lake
District as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It examines all aspects
of the Lake District's history and identity, brings the story up to
date and looks at current issues in conservation, policy and
tourism marketing. In doing so, it not only provides a unique and
valuable analysis of this region, but offers insights into the
history of cultural and heritage tourism in Britain and beyond.
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