One of the most enjoyable parts of gardening for me is making compost. There is nothing more satisfying than emptying my compost bins at the start of the Autumn and seeing all that lovely composted material just waiting to get dug back into my borders. If I’m busy I don’t even bother to dig it in but just spread it on the beds to let the worms dig it in, add nutrients to the soil and help mulch my plants during the winter.
Richard Ginori’s Fiesole porcelain is a beautiful
combination of the luxurious with the rustic. Gold garlands provide the
borders, while nestled in the center of the shapes is a snapshot of a Tuscan village.
A beautiful vintage set of Richard Ginori Porcelain made for the New York
department store, Bonwit Teller.
, nine items with the award winning motif. The collection was
created as a modern interpretation of the infamous Blue Fluted designed in
1885. The oldest form created by Ginori which combines superior craftsmanship
& history-makes a classic of our time. Please purchase on online http://www.etabletop.com/
If you want to get the most from your bedding plants, look beyond the question of color, into the form, shape and texture of the plants, and how they fit into the overall garden composition.
Bedding plants, whether annual or perennial, are generally planted to supply color to the garden. This role is most effective when the bedding plants are chosen as part of a specific color scheme, as opposed to being “peppered? around the garden without any clear design purpose. Like all plants however, they also have shape, form and texture. When these properties are taken into account and acted upon, the bedding plants become, as they properly should, an integral and organic part of the overall garden composition.