..where there is still doubtless honey for tea!
Joan Brull i Vinyoles (1863-1912)
Real weddings and styled photoshoots are featured here for inspiration in planning your luxury wedding.
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Bluebell stairs by M_Hart14
~ Circus Lane, Edinburgh, Scotland ~
Location: Shottery, Warwickshire. © 2003 David Preston All Rights Reserved
indigofae14: Climbing roses - Derbyshire, England.
Arlington Row, Bibury, Gloucestershire, England by Kai Beckmann I hope everyone had a wonderful Easter. I certainly did. I am just about to hop in bed to watch Madam Secretary and The Good Wife. xo
I walked this trail back to the ridge many times when I was younger.
The International Garden Photographer of the Year is one of the world’s premier competitions
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The garden was completely redesigned in the early 20th century by Colonel and Mrs Jenner.
Shell Cottage, Pembrokeshire | by nk-grafix
From a Tuscan retreat to thatches in Hampshire and Shropshire
Fantasy Minecraft Builds
But Somewhere out there someone is building their paradise via via via via a y...
Abbott Fuller Graves Hollyhocks Late 19th century
Brume matinale sur le jardin anglais...
Celtic Garden making Wisdom and Inspiration from Irishman and builder John Cullen owner of Celtic gardens in Dexter Michigan.
“Hortensien im Nebel - Hydrangea in the mist” by Mindful Photography
Sir Samuel Luke Fildes. English (1843 - 1927)
Do you prefer a little chaos in the garden? Get our favorite cottage garden ideas -- including suggested cottage-style flowers and plants -- and learn how to add exuberant color to your outdoor space.
Cragside is the country home of William George Armstrong, a 19th Century engineer who is responsible for a number of inventions and amassed great wealth as a builder of weapons and ships. Cragside was the first private home in the world to have electric lighting supplied by an hydraulic turbine generator and the system was designed by Armstrong. Armstrong also purchased Bamburgh castle late in his life and spent 1 million GBP in turning it into a convalescent home for "the right sort of people". And during the American Civil War, he sold arms to both sides. Since Lord Armstrong had no children, he left his empire to his nephew who proceeded to lose it all and go into debt in only 10 years! The up side is that he had no money to make any alterations to Cragside, so the house and contents are much as they were when Lord Armstrong and his wife lived there.
Margaretha Roosenboom (Dutch, 1843 - 1896): A sprig of wild roses (via Albricht)
Delightfulness from classic illustrator Roger Duvoisin
Built in the early 16th-century when Smallhythe was a thriving shipbuilding port (today it's miles from the nearest navigable water), Smallhythe Place was later purchased by celebrity Victorian actress, Ellen Terry, in 1899. Ellen Terry's daughter, Edith Craig, transformed the house into a museum to her mother's stage career. There is also a thatched roof barn converted to a theatre where the likes of Sir John Guilgud (the nephew of Ellen Terry) have performed.
The Garden - Ethel Walker