Archive for Blog of the Week

Weekend Things

holiday garden bells

Here we go a Wassailing! (or  shopping or whatever other last minute holiday activties you have lined up!) – Here are few links to carry you over til monday in case you actually have a few spare moments!

~ Without snow and in the dark of winter, these could actually come in handy!

Garden Fashion.  I love when the two collide.

~ I think a crazy sunken TV pit could be quite cozy this time of year.

Paper Flowers with a watercolor flair.

~ I want to be neighbors with Santa.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I also write for Apartment Therapy check out this week with The Gardenist (that’s me!):

Holiday Decor from Garden Implements

also last week -

Holiday Decor From Garden Findings

I hope you have a beautiful holiday season weekend!

Comments

Blogs I Like: March 2011

flowerona blog header

Flowerona was created by florist Rona in Surrey, England with the sole purpose of celebrating all things flowers.  It’s an interesting read and it’s full of beautiful images.

haute nature

Haute Nature is a catalog of  smart creative reuse ideas, art, design and cutting edge eco inventions. The focus at HauteNature is on innovative methods of harnessing the earths resources without waste. The site is edited by Holland Seydel.

strawberry earth

Strawberry Earth isn’t just a blog, it’s also a film festival .  Mette te Velde and Ikenna Azuike (in Amsterdam) created it after being inspired by the green movement in New York. Wanting to bring New York’s optimism, creativity and green solutions to Amsterdam they created this daily source of inspiration for people interested in sustainable living, eco friendly design and a good laugh!

The Strawberry Earth Film Festival. (coming in June 2011) screens the latest and best films and documentaries with a focus on sustainability and the environment.

ready made

Readymade magazine is an endless source for on the cheap (but always clever) DIY projects.   Their retro styling and practicality is right up my alley.

ethicurian

The Ethicurian.  I am still on a kick to gain a greater understanding of our food system and its challenges and triumphs….this is my latest reading material in that effort.

rural intelligence

Rural Intelligence is the simply the best place to find out what is going on in Western MA. I live in East Central MA, but these eastern colonies aren’t like my hometown western states….you can cover a whole lot of ground (and state lines) in a little amount of time….so keeping up with the western mass crowd and all the interesting things that they are doing makes sure I always have a good reason for a short drive.

rural intelligence

Snug Harbour Farm is top on my list of new (relatively) local garden destinations. I have been eying those tall skinny myrtle topiary and their connoisseurs palette has me intrigued. Not so much to see at the blog per se….but I am hoping that the nursery itself is all it’s cracked up to be. Kennebunk Maine, here I come.

Comments (3)

The Gardenist on Apartment Therapy

Ok — I am posting this here, just in case you missed it on Wednesday.  (I don’t mean to leave anyone out!!)

Wij Tradgardar

So, here it is, my inaugural column on Apartment Therapy where I introduce myself as ‘The Gardenist’.

If you are curious where I found inspiration for the name, check out this link.

By last count, this post had (74) comments!!  A fact which I find shocking and motivating at the same time.  I have even inadvertently managed to inspire a little comment drama, which I suppose is the flip side to wishing I had more comments here.

So, if you want a little more studio ‘g’ type stuff with a little more of an Apartment Therapy twist, join me every wed, over there at 1:15 EST.

Comments (4)

Soiled & Seeded: Cultivating a Garden Culture

If you have been coming by here for a while you might have heard me talk about this before, but I’m going to say it again.   I really miss England, and one of the biggest reasons is because I miss what I can only call a ‘garden culture’.   Writing this blog has always been my attempt to inspire a greater connection for people with all the joys of cultivating the land, it’s benefits to heath and environment and the beauty that can be created.  We, in the US share a lot of similarities with our Friends in the UK, but our lack of a garden culture, is one big difference.

soiled and seeded grocery store garden

jays grocery store garden toronto canada

A Toronto, CA based non profit group has a very similar goal in creating a new magazine called Soiled and Seeded.  Here is what they have to say about themselves:

Soiled and Seeded does not claim to act as a reference tool for authoritative horticultural advice, but rather as a rich and eclectic source of ideas, gardening knowledge, learned practices and usually a bit of garden history. Our content and sensibility are deeply rooted in a varied and expansive exploration of garden culture. We believe that connecting people and plants binds us to a sense of place and community and creates the opportunity to explore the myriad ways people experience their natural environment.

I am hoping for there longevity and success in this effort.

eathouse garden vegetable

These images are from their most recent (2nd) edition. I wish more grocery outlets were like Jay’s Garden Grocery and Variety store (top). Food shopping could be so much more interesting if plants overhung all the aisles.   And the Eathouse (bottom) by Architects Marijke Bruinsma and  Marjan van Capelle and Arjen de Groot is an exciting combination of reuse-able materials to make a garden shed that is thoroughly planted with edibles.
To see more of each of these stories, as well as others, take peek over at www.soiledandseeded.com

Photo credits: Mikaël Lavogiez and Marijke Bruinsma

Comments (2)

Blogs I like : February 2011

February just flies by with its ridiculous shortness.  If it were a normal month, it could actually still be February today.  It is under this pretense that I have decided to operate in rolling out a few of my monthly features that just didn’t get done inside the short month.  So with that, I share with you Blogs I like and have been obsessed with the last 31 days.  violet picture by Photo: Lisa Warninger.

frolic blog header

First up is Frolic, where I found the pretty violets image (above).  Chelsea Fuss who writes here shares her florals and general design inspiration. And the violets reminded me of something I just learned yesterday about the senses….did you know that you can only smell a violet for a moment and then something in the nose happens and you can’t smell them anymore?  A friend read this in a book about the senses and I am so intrigued that I plan to borrow the book when she is done.

saipua blog header

Also on the topic of pretty floral blogs.  Saipua never fails to whet my appetite for blossoms, pretty color combinations and ideas for planting and picking.

design love fest blog header

Bri Emery a graphic designer over at Design Love Fest creates a blog that is unique as they come.  Plenty of original ideas and design inspiration springs from the files of this site.

poppytalk blog header

I have known of Poppytalk for years but somehow never spent any time on the site.  So I was baffled when I clicked over recently and realized that Jan and Earl are like my design soul mates.  Their tag line of ‘the beautiful, the decayed, the handmade’ is a perfect description for this beautiful site.

splendid willow blog header

When I first popped in at Splendid Willow, I had this thought as the page loaded that it might be a blog about the genus ‘salix’. Wrong….but it is a another very interesting and well done design site with a Swedish twist.

The Selby blog header

Photography; learning about it,  studying the work of others, and trying desperately to get better at it, is a current obsession of mine.  Hence The Selby with a rich palette and an interesting style is a place I can get lost in visual overload for hours.

fast company design header

Fast Company Design is so insightful and useful for staying abreast of market trends, interesting people and modern ideas.  I have come to regard it as a daily must read.

thinkingardens header

Thinkin Gardens sets the bar in the Garden Design industry for though provoking articles, good writing and bringing together the best and brightest in the industry.

momfilter blog header

And Finally, amongst my short list of beloved magazines that have sadly bit the dust, Cookie ranks near the top.  But Momfilter is here now to take the edge off that hole in my reading material.  It’s by the Cookie people and it’s every bit as good as the magazine was.

Comments (1)

Valentine Garden DIY: Camilla’s Simple Flower Gifts

Family Chic, the blog home of Camilla Fabbri, is one of my new favorite online haunts.  She is a woman after my own thrift-shopping, transforming, incessant small project, heart.  Except she seems to be able to get her projects completed, where as mine tend to languish for months on end in my basement ”project” area.  She is inspiring me to get it together and finish a few things.

family chic newspaper vase cover

Like perhaps these pretty valentines day projects.  The simple vase cover, crafted from crumpled FT newspapers, quickly sewn together makes this easy grocery store collection of pink roses and tulips far more special that one of those huge (and I think a bit vulgar) long-stem-baby’s breath v-day bouquets.

love stiches on a plant happy vaentines day garden craft

I would be happy to receive this heartfelt message wouldn’t you?  Happy Valentines day!!

Full instructions for each of these two DIY projects can be found at Camillas blog.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Comments

« Previous entries Next Page » Next Page »