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Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Gardening: plants > House plants
Use the power of the humble house plant to combat the stresses of
modern life! Succulents and indoor house plants may seem extra
trendy right now, but these plants have more benefits than simply
looking beautiful. Everyday products pollute the air in our homes
and our mental wellbeing is threatened like never before. This
gardening book reveals the best life-enhancing houseplants that can
reduce stress, fight fatigue, and even lower your blood sugar.
Winning Gold for the accompanying exhibit at the RHS Chelsea Flower
Show 2021, My Houseplant Changed My Life draws on groundbreaking
research, profiling the best air-purifying plants you can put in
your home to reduce pollutant gases, particulates, and volatile
compounds. Discover how these indoor plants can actively clean the
air and improve your mental health through their colours, scent,
habit, and nurturing needs. Explore how having leafy companions can
help to unlock your potential: - Profiles of the 50 top
air-purifying and mood-enhancing plants - Easy-to-follow advice and
expert tips from David Domoney, award-winning horticulturalist -
Informative text highlights the natural wonder of each plant -
Feature spreads show plant combinations to enhance your mood in
different ways - Step-by-step demonstrations of essential care
techniques Packed with expert advice, this book will equip you with
everything you need to keep your plants thriving. It also
highlights mindful ways to nurture and increase your green guests:
by misting, wiping, feeding, pinching, pruning, and propagating.
Discover the Power of Nature The ideal gift for your green-fingered
friends, this book is perfect for urbanites with little or no
outdoor space who want to increase the amount of greenery in their
life.
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Kew Pocketbooks: Cacti
(Hardcover)
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew; Introduction by William Baker, Olwen M. Grace
1
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R294
R269
Discovery Miles 2 690
Save R25 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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This stunning new series of pocketbooks from Kew offer a snapshot
into the diverse and beautiful world of plants. Each book lavishly
showcases choice examples from individual plant groups or
collections, beginning with the popular plant groups Palms and
Cacti. The Library, Art and Archives at Kew is one of the most
extensive botanical libraries in the world, with the oldest item
dating back to the 1370s. In this new pocketbook series from Kew,
each book presents 40 botanical paintings from the collection,
illustrating the variety within each plant group, as well as the
diversity of the collection and artistic styles. An introductory
chapter by a Kew expert provides an overview of cacti, and extended
captions accompany each painting. The luxury finish on these books
make them a must-have gift item, printed on uncoated paper and with
a cloth and foil finish.
Hands up if you've killed a plant? Yep, me too. It's no secret that
we've all become plant obsessed, but do we really understand how to
look after them? I am not a Professor of Botany, but having run my
florist and plant shop, Grace & Thorn, since 2011 I've learnt a
few things along the way. HOW NOT TO KILL YOUR PLANTS is about
taking the hocus-pocus out of plants and flowers and enabling you
to understand a plant's needs in order to know where to place and
how to style them, but most importantly how to keep them alive. I
get asked every type of question you can imagine and I have written
this book to answer them. Watering can down, it's time to go back
to the roots. Keep it green. Nik x (AKA The Agony Plant)
Jim Hole looks at locations and areas inside of your home and helps
you with the selection of great plants for a variety of indoor
locations and situations
In Uplift Cinema, Allyson Nadia Field recovers the significant yet
forgotten legacy of African American filmmaking in the 1910s. Like
the racial uplift project, this cinema emphasized economic
self-sufficiency, education, and respectability as the keys to
African American progress. Field discusses films made at the
Tuskegee and Hampton Institutes to promote education, as well as
the controversial The New Era, which was an antiracist response to
D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation. She also shows how Black
filmmakers in New York and Chicago engaged with uplift through the
promotion of Black modernity. Uplift cinema developed not just as a
response to onscreen racism, but constituted an original engagement
with the new medium that has had a deep and lasting significance
for African American cinema. Although none of these films survived,
Field's examination of archival film ephemera presents a method for
studying lost films that opens up new frontiers for exploring early
film culture.
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