| Charles James Richardson - 1873 - 528 pagina’s
...patterns for blind ornaments. 53 03 < of our most eminent writers on gardens, Repton, remarked that " gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts, have much in common ; and the department of architecture which belongs more exclusively to gardens has especially a great affinity... | |
| Daniel Denison Slade - 1895 - 196 pagina’s
...gardening art is closely associated the style of architecture of the days of Henry and Elizabeth. ' ' Gardening and Architecture, like all the fine arts,...And that department of architecture which belongs to the garden more exclusively, has especially a great affinity with gardening in its broader principles.... | |
| Charles James Richardson - 1898 - 522 pagina’s
...<M § C ftj .5? Q> o (^ (s) ^ 3 OXK of our most eminent writers on gardens, Kepton, remarked that " gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts, have much in common ; and the department of architecture which belongs more exclusively to gardens has especially a great affinity... | |
| Edward Kemp - 1911 - 386 pagina’s
...adverting to it, however, I am tempted to make a short incursion into the territory of a neighboring profession — architecture — with which indeed...relation between the two than is usually admitted or the ordinary products of practitioners in either art would at all justify us in believing. Architectural... | |
| Massachusetts Horticultural Society - 1875 - 1052 pagina’s
...form of landscape gardening, are the Italian and Elizabethan styles of architecture. Kemp says,* " Gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts,...affinity with gardening in its broader principles. * How to lay out a Garden. In fact, there is much more relation between the two than is usually admitted,... | |
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