How to Lay Out a Garden: Intended as a General Guide in Choosing, Forming, Or Improving an Estate, (from a Quarter of an Acre to a Hundred Acres in Extent,) with Reference to Both Design and ExecutionBradbury and Evans, 1864 - 428 pagina's |
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Pagina xx
... entrances ; to have a gradual Ascent ; to follow the natural undu- lations of the ground generally ; to be in easy ... Entrance - Courts ; Access to Servants ' Apart- ments to be kept separate . • 4. Treatment of Walks : not to follow ...
... entrances ; to have a gradual Ascent ; to follow the natural undu- lations of the ground generally ; to be in easy ... Entrance - Courts ; Access to Servants ' Apart- ments to be kept separate . • 4. Treatment of Walks : not to follow ...
Pagina xxi
... entrance front of Blenheim Palace , and about the large bridge in Blenheim Park ; similar want of trees to support Windsor Castle • 4. Masses of particular plants for effect as to form and colour : Varieties fitted for carrying out this ...
... entrance front of Blenheim Palace , and about the large bridge in Blenheim Park ; similar want of trees to support Windsor Castle • 4. Masses of particular plants for effect as to form and colour : Varieties fitted for carrying out this ...
Pagina xxiv
... Entrances their position and character ; examples of different kinds of entrances ; double lodges • • · 15. Sea - side Gardens : Grass , in a variety of terrace - banks , to abound in them ; specimen of desirable treatment , and section ...
... Entrances their position and character ; examples of different kinds of entrances ; double lodges • • · 15. Sea - side Gardens : Grass , in a variety of terrace - banks , to abound in them ; specimen of desirable treatment , and section ...
Pagina 3
... Entrance from any other point would always more or less interfere with the lawn , and the more polished parts of the garden ; besides laying bare some of the best windows of the house , or involving the necessity of giving these an ...
... Entrance from any other point would always more or less interfere with the lawn , and the more polished parts of the garden ; besides laying bare some of the best windows of the house , or involving the necessity of giving these an ...
Pagina 12
... entrances on the northern side , the increased and expanding breadth at the south part will be of great consequence ... entrance front , and which widens out towards the extreme verge on the best side of the house , will , by admitting ...
... entrances on the northern side , the increased and expanding breadth at the south part will be of great consequence ... entrance front , and which widens out towards the extreme verge on the best side of the house , will , by admitting ...
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
How to Lay Out a Garden: Intended as a General Guide in Choosing, Forming ... Edward Kemp Volledige weergave - 1901 |
How to Lay Out a Garden: Intended as a General Guide in Choosing, Forming ... Edward Kemp Volledige weergave - 1894 |
How to Lay Out a Garden: Intended as a General Guide in Choosing, Forming ... Edward Kemp Volledige weergave - 1901 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
adapted appear architectural arrangement aspect Aucuba japonica beauty beds Berberis aquifolium border boundary breadth building centre character Charles Longman climbers colour common common Yew connexion conservatory corner Cotoneaster curves Deodar Cedar dwarf edge effect elevation entrance Erica carnea Erica multiflora especially evergreens fence figures flower-beds flower-garden flowers formal front garden geometrical style give glades Gothic grass ground groups hedge Holly house-yard Irish Yews irregular kind kitchen kitchen-garden land landscape latter Laurustinus lawn less likewise lines masses narrow natural neighbourhood objects ornamental outline park peculiar Pernettya picturesque plantation pleasure pleasure-grounds plot principal produce render require Rhododendron hirsutum Rhododendrons road rockery Roses rustic shade shape shelter shrubs side slope sort south-east south-west space stone straight walk style surface taste terminating object terrace bank things tion trees and shrubs undulations variety vases wall wire yard
Populaire passages
Pagina i - A THING of beauty is a joy for ever : Its loveliness increases ; it will never Pass into nothingness ; but still will keep A bower quiet for us, and a sleep Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
Pagina 85 - Art should be pretty obviously expressed in that part of every garden which is in the immediate vicinity of the house, and may sometimes retain its prominence throughout the whole place. In the latter case, terraces, straight lines of walks, avenues of trees or shrubs, rows of flowerbeds, and geometrical figures, with all kinds of architectural ornaments, will prevail. Considerable dignity of character may certainly thus be acquired ; and, if well sustained, the expression of high art will be a very...
Pagina 270 - Any great elevation should never be sought in small rockeries. This would be inconsistent with their breadth, and would render them too prominent and artificial. They should not be carried higher than the point at which they can be well supported and backed with a broad mass of earth and vegetation. Additional height may sometimes be given, if desired, by excavating into a hollow the base from which they spring.
Pagina 43 - They serve to make it appear peculiarly one's own, converting it into a kind of sanctum. A place that has neither of these qualities, might almost as well be public property. Those who love their garden, often want to walk, work, ruminate, read, romp, or examine the various changes and developments of Nature, in it ; and to do so unobserved. All that attaches us to a garden, and renders it a delightful and cherished object, seems dashed and marred, if it has no privacy.
Pagina 390 - ... the plants out of the ground as short a time as possible; and the roots should be preserved and spread out with the utmost care. A...
Pagina 168 - Gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts, have much in common. And that department of architecture which belongs more exclusively to the garden has, especially, a great affinity with gardening in its broader principles. In fact, there is much more relation between the two than is usually admitted, or than the ordinary products of practitioners in either art would at all justify us in believing.
Pagina 24 - ... attained. One thing after another is, at different times, observed and liked, in some similar place that is visited, and each is successively wished to be transferred to the observer's own garden, without regard to its fitness for the locality, or its relation to what has previously been done.
Pagina 269 - No appearance of art and no approach to the regularity or smoothness proper to works of art will be at all in place here. On the contrary, the surface of the whole cannot be too irregular or too variedly indented or prominent. An additional projection must be given to some of the parts by moderate-sized bushes, or short-stemmed weeping trees. Evergreen shrubs or low trees will be particularly useful. Provision will therefore have to be made in the placing of the stones for planting a few shrubs and...
Pagina 26 - An undue introduction of sculptured or other figures, vases, seats, and arbours, baskets for plants, and such like objects, would come within the limits of this description. And there is nothing of which people in general are so intolerant in others, as the attempt, when glaringly and injudiciously made, to crowd within a confined space the appropriate adornments of the most ample gardens. It is invariably taken as evidence of a desire to appear to be and to possess that which the reality of the...
Pagina 113 - It does not reject straight lines entirely near the house, or in connection with a flower garden, a rosary, or a subordinate building as a greenhouse that has a separate piece of garden to it. Nor does it refuse to borrow from the picturesque in regard to the arrangement and grouping of plants. It is a blending of art with nature, — an attempt to interfuse the two, or to produce something intermediate between the pure state of either, which shall combine the vagaries of the one with the regularity...