9/29/12

Illustrated Design

Today’s been a good day for reading.  Taking notes on the timeless style of Sister Parish -

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And appreciating the detailed watercolors of Mita Corsini Bland.

Astor Library

Hope you’re having a wonderful weekend too!

Love_Lisa_&_Taylor[9]

 

Sister Parish Design

9/15/12

Lunch in the garden.

Today a cool crisp breeze fills the air & the house with the smell of sweet Clematis!Clematis Arbor 2012
The rain has renewed our landscape & the arbor – she’s being a bit of a show-off!
Path to Gate August 2012
This year Miss Clematis put her best dress on. The roses are envious & climbing higher than usual!DSC_0496
 Peeking over the fence and feeling grateful for the new stone path & Bluegrass that my son helped lay. 
Clematis on Fence
Miss Clematis is lazy & full & with arms opened wide she welcomes guests at the back gate.
Garden Gate
This old bronze bell has been at the entrance to all of our patios, courtyards, porches since I was a child.  My mother sent it with us when we moved to Kentucky.  Thanks, Mom.
Garden Bell Today I’m preparing lunch alfresco for friends.
Life seems so much easier & relaxed when we eat outside.
Lunch in the garden.  Meanwhile, my helper is still guarding last Sunday’s paper!
Sunday PaperSunday Paper
On the menu, Warm Beet Salad with Wilted Greens from a favorite cookbook, Fresh & Fast by Marie Simmons
Lunch in the garden.
Baskets are handy for bringing everything outdoors.
Lunch in the garden.Lunch in the garden.
Lunch in the garden.
I’m using some beautiful china that I recently purchased from Decoratifs’. If you’ve been here from the start, you might recall that the Lexington landmark was the subject of my very first post!
Lunch in the garden.
  I was able to grab the last 6 dinner plates in three different patterns, from their “pink house!”
Lunch in the garden.
Time to pull things together and enjoy a lazy afternoon.
Lunch in the garden.
 Help arrived just in time for a long walk!
Lauren's BootsGracie's Collar
Hope you’re having a wonderful weekend too!
 
It saddens me to no end to tell you that after 27 years John & Wes decided to close Decoratifs’.
They are already missed!
Clematis and Roses
Photos| Lisa Porter

9/12/12

Poetry & Gardening

Tendenze Design
“Courtyards and boxwood and stonewalls and nepeta,
Agave and old barns and salvage antiqua
Formal and classic and playing with greens
These are a few of her favorite things.”
Mary Jasch

When I first read this poem I thought to myself…
These are a few of my favorite things & the poet must be a gardener as the two always seem to go hand in hand. 
Tendenze design
My intuition served me correctly…
Penned by freelance writer and photographer Mary Jasch, she is also the editor & publisher of DIG IT! magazine. 
Let me tell you that DIG IT! is more than just a garden full of pretty flowers.
 DIG IT! is a digital publication where avid gardeners delight in sharing their roots & gaining knowledge.  The contributing writers are horticulturists, conservationists, landscapers, artists, master & everyday gardeners!  It’s dog-eared with wonderful links – Also a newsletter & calendar of events for all of you gardening along the east coast. 
Tendenze Design
Informative & resourceful yes!  Another appealing aspect is that it reads like a gardener’s journal as the magazine is enriched by and dedicated to the loving memories of Mary Jasch’s mother & grandmother. 
At DIG IT! Mary also invites readers to put on their muck boots & join her at her blog where she tends to her own personal landscape. 
Whether it’s the gruesome task of pruning & plowing past a six-foot Rose of Sharon entwined in chain link or the sleepy-eyed luxury of picking early morning breakfast berries from her own backyard, she reflects in a melodious tone even while yanking a dead plant out of the soil! 
Tendenze Design
The Grounds, a regular feature at DIG IT! is where I discovered that this writer, photographer, editor, publisher & gardener is also a poet!  In an article titled Her Favorite Things - Mary opens with her poem about designer & gardener Andrea Filippone is seen here at the entrance to her Orangerie. 
Tendenze Design
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The beautiful photographs you see throughout this story and the “Courtyards and boxwood” that she speaks of are in reference to the 19th-century homestead of Andrea Filippone & husband William Welch.  The “old barns and salvage antiqua” refer to their all-encompassing architecture, interior, and landscape design firm.  
Tendenze DesignAndrea Filippone & William Welch photographed by William Waldron for Elle Décor   
All beautifully settled together amongst the gentle hills of New Jersey horse country.
This is Tendenze Design.
Tendenze DesignSource     
At the end of her poem,
Mary Jasch begins her narrative & leads readers on a prolific tour of the windswept estate.
“Walk through the archway of the barns, anchored with iron horse legs, and enter another world – beyond the threshold of Americana out front. A courtyard comes into view. Suddenly the barns morph into house with long stone steps across the front with rows of heuchera, boxwood and ivy rising, flanked with agave, elephant ears and hydrangea. This is a landscape to learn from.” Mary Jasch
  Tendenze Design
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While writing this story a theme kept running through my mind. 
The woman who works with her hands is a laborer.  The woman who works with her head is a craftswoman.  The woman who works with her hands, her head, and her heart is an artist.
Tendenze Design Source
Mary Jasch & Andrea Filippone are both hard-working & incredibly talented women, but it’s the way in which they weave their artistry not only into their own lives but the lives of others as well that inspires me to no end.
Thank you, ladies.
AA1
 
DIG_IT_5
 
Tendenze Design  
The May 2012 issue of Elle Décor featured a marvelous layout, photographed by William Waldron, on the bucolic country life of Andrea Filippone & William Welch.