It’s that time of the year when we roll up our sleeves, get into the creative mood and make something so spookily wonderful that it sends chills down the neighbors' spine. And while you still have time to figure out what you are gonna wear for Halloween (or shall we stop pretending and just face the fact that we all are going to dress as the green-tracksuited players from Squid Game), the house interior and exterior can’t wait.
Artist/designer Joshua Ben Longo has created one monster of a cool rug.
Loch Ness Glamping is a glamorous camping spot for those hoping to catch of glimpse of the elusive Nessie.
"Long Island's most famous landmark" [source], popularized by Robert Venturi and gang in Learning from Las Vegas (spread here).
Elegance comes in many styles, you get to choose! See the 27 PHOTOS of elegant living room ideas we curated for you.
One of the more popular activities on Halloween, aside from trick-or-treating and drinking, is visiting haunted houses to get your adren...
Interesting Mouth Shaped Entrances
Cement draping and solar lighting create a spooky ghoul for my front yard I started by creating a frame with a dollar store garbage can for the body, pvc pipe…
I've been patting myself on the back for weeks now, ever since my late March posting of a series of snowy misty late winter photos (the sort nobody else takes) of Old Westbury Gardens, the former Phipps estate on Long Island. What a moody place it was that day, and what a glorious place it was last week, on one of those erratic hot days that have peppered this cold spring. The Phipps place, called Westbury House when built in the first decade of the 20th century, is an unabashedly gorgeous mansion which speaks with the 17th century accent of Restoration England. You can read all about it, and the Phippses, in my earlier post (titled 'Westbury House'). Today I'm revisiting the snowy gardens, and rephotographing them in bloom from, as often as possible, the same angles as before. Today's trip from the main gate on Old Westbury Road to the house is a qualitatively different experience. The south side of Westbury House, seen below, gazes across a raised lawn terrace to a half-mile long allee, reached via a pair of wistaria hung stairs. When I climbed them last March I knew they'd be fabulous in the spring, and they have outdone my expectations. If you like old houses - and why else would you be reading this? - you should definitely make plans for a day trip. This enormous tree was moved here in the 1920s. That's the root ball you're looking at in the vintage image. On that snowy afternoon last March, not for any good reason, I started at the west gate to the Walled Garden. That's where we'll start now. What a difference the smiling spring has made. Horticultural Director Maura Brush is showing me and my pal Krisztina around. Maura has a great job. A few more winter/summer contrasts... The great ornament of the Walled Garden is a semi-circular arcade that borders a large lily pond at the garden's southern end. "No Visitors?" Hah! For most of my life I've dreamed of having a greenhouse - meaning one with the windows intact (I've already had the others). This appealing vintage complex is the nerve center of Maura's staff of eight year-round horticulturists - six full-time, 2 part-time - augmented annually by an average of five student interns from around the world. This year's crop comes from Poland, Korea, China, France and Germany. Interns work and live on the estate for nine months to a year, and go on to jobs in everything from landscape architecture and education, to plant research and commercial growing. Today's Head Grower, appropriately, lives in the original gardener's cottage. The Allee, divided in the middle by what they call the South Gate, stretches a full half mile from a lawn immediately below the house to the Jericho Turnpike. It's a different world in winter than in summer. Among various other gardens on the property is the Rose Garden.... ...and the Cottage Garden, where Phipps daughter Peggie got the "petit hameau" thatched number and her brothers, Ben, Hubert and Michel, made due with mini-log cabins. Their parents evidently had a "No dog left behind" policy. Unlike so many divine vintage swimming pools at formerly private estates, this one has neither been filled in nor painted black and disguised as a lily pond. Employees use it regularly (I hope I'm not speaking out of school). What estate is complete without a Temple of Love? The life of Jay Phipps and family - and numerous others like them back then - was a stately progression from one luxurious destination to another. In the case of the Phippses, it was springtime at Westbury House, summer in Canada or Scotland, and winters at Palm Beach. Ergo, their Long Island gardens were planted with an eye to looking best when they were around to appreciate them. Much of today's planting scheme is historic, but much has been amended to bloom in other seasons, so visitors on alternate progressions will have something to look at. Old Westbury Gardens is one of the grandest and most intact of Long Island's surviving country estates. Drive through those gates and you actually feel as though you're deep in the country - no mean trick in this part of the world. The link is www.oldwestburygardens.org.