One of America's favorite cookbook authors is Ina Garten. She lives and works in East Hampton, in a lovely shingle style home with beautiful manicured gardens. Her cookbooks are full of easy recipes and lots of hints on great entertaining, but I find myself looking at the photos of her house and her garden just as much as the food photography Lets go on a garden tour!!! This is actually a somewhat newer remodeled home that she and her husband Jeffrey purchased, after living in a rental property, while she ran her successful food business The Barefoot Contessa. She hired landscape designer Edwina Von Gal to create a series of Parterre gardens on 1/4 acre of land near the house, calling it the "kitchen garden". Initially she envisioned the parterres filled with vegetables but as most gardeners find out, deer and squirrels will take a bite out of just about anything edible. The parterres soon became filled with flowers and very little in the way of herbs and vegetables. Over the next ten years she tried to persuade her neighbor to sell her his property (so she could build a new kitchen and entertaining area) but to no avail...then finally in 2006 the owner acquiesced and Ina acquired the property and was able to build a new barn inspired kitchen, a walled herb garden and cotinued to plant more beautiful expanses of flowers and trees Ina is so cute! The photo above from an early cookbook shows the young boxwood hedges and lavenders just starting to fill in. Boxwood hedging is really wonderful but takes years to look really full. The porch with the wisteria vine has since been screened and now has a permanent roof. I love some of the old wood fencing and little sheds she has on the property. No matter how hard people try, the look of time worn wood and the structure of old trees and shrubs just cannot be duplicated The new barn sits directly across from the house Below is the new walled herb and vegetable garden which sits adjacent to the new barn. To be honest, I'm not sure how much I like this garden. I love the rustic touches in the barn design but I hope she plants it full of veggies and wonderful produce. It will be so much prettier. The walled garden has really filled in, in these photos... love the simple bird bath Here Ina is growing cherry tomatoes, chard, dill, squash just to name a few. In the corner is a fig tree! I think Ina's tomatoes are in need of some trellis work...nice to see some one else has these crazy 10 foot high tomato plants too! love the orange roses! There are dozens of articles about this wonderful barn and all of the beautiful details of both the exterior and the inside...including the amazing kitchen and great room Most of her table arrangements are simple and I suspect she uses as much as she can from her gardens to fill in the centerpieces In the first of her two cookbooks there are a few photos of the early years of the garden just beginning to take shape. She definitely has a thing for hydrangea, doesn't everyone? Her food styling is always so pretty, especially the shots taken out of doors. I like the photo below with the old lichen covered fence and the grey shingle shed in the background She seems quite at home in the garden and I suspect she is a confident clipper and snipper but not so much of a digger and planter Are you a clipper and snipper or a digger and planter I'm a little of both! Hope you enjoyed the tour Happy Gardening Photos via House Beautiful, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, O Magazine Ina Garten cookbooks
Blooming on everything from fabric to fine china, orchids are the season's most intoxicating flowers
The late Tasha Tudor was a consummate Corgi lover, incorporating them into her art, her beautiful books, and her personal life. If you’re not familiar with the legacy of this prolific and beloved woman, visit her family’s website HERE, or the Rookery Ramblings blog HERE to learn more. * * * * * “Corgis are [...]
Educação Infantil, plano de aula para educação infantil, BNCC, desenhos para imprimir, musicas de rotina para educação infantil
Silver Ponyfoot is a wonderful ground cover for drought tolerant landscaping.
Aquí puedes encontrar fotos con ideas de diseño de interiores. ¡Inspírate!
Descargar esta fondo Hombre Con Una Cara Encapuchada Sobre Fondo Negro, Imagen De Un Ladrón, Macro, Verde la imagen para libre. Pngtree ofrece fondos de alta resolución, papel tapiz, pancartas y carteles.| 3182499
One of America's favorite cookbook authors is Ina Garten. She lives and works in East Hampton, in a lovely shingle style home with beautiful manicured gardens. Her cookbooks are full of easy recipes and lots of hints on great entertaining, but I find myself looking at the photos of her house and her garden just as much as the food photography Lets go on a garden tour!!! This is actually a somewhat newer remodeled home that she and her husband Jeffrey purchased, after living in a rental property, while she ran her successful food business The Barefoot Contessa. She hired landscape designer Edwina Von Gal to create a series of Parterre gardens on 1/4 acre of land near the house, calling it the "kitchen garden". Initially she envisioned the parterres filled with vegetables but as most gardeners find out, deer and squirrels will take a bite out of just about anything edible. The parterres soon became filled with flowers and very little in the way of herbs and vegetables. Over the next ten years she tried to persuade her neighbor to sell her his property (so she could build a new kitchen and entertaining area) but to no avail...then finally in 2006 the owner acquiesced and Ina acquired the property and was able to build a new barn inspired kitchen, a walled herb garden and cotinued to plant more beautiful expanses of flowers and trees Ina is so cute! The photo above from an early cookbook shows the young boxwood hedges and lavenders just starting to fill in. Boxwood hedging is really wonderful but takes years to look really full. The porch with the wisteria vine has since been screened and now has a permanent roof. I love some of the old wood fencing and little sheds she has on the property. No matter how hard people try, the look of time worn wood and the structure of old trees and shrubs just cannot be duplicated The new barn sits directly across from the house Below is the new walled herb and vegetable garden which sits adjacent to the new barn. To be honest, I'm not sure how much I like this garden. I love the rustic touches in the barn design but I hope she plants it full of veggies and wonderful produce. It will be so much prettier. The walled garden has really filled in, in these photos... love the simple bird bath Here Ina is growing cherry tomatoes, chard, dill, squash just to name a few. In the corner is a fig tree! I think Ina's tomatoes are in need of some trellis work...nice to see some one else has these crazy 10 foot high tomato plants too! love the orange roses! There are dozens of articles about this wonderful barn and all of the beautiful details of both the exterior and the inside...including the amazing kitchen and great room Most of her table arrangements are simple and I suspect she uses as much as she can from her gardens to fill in the centerpieces In the first of her two cookbooks there are a few photos of the early years of the garden just beginning to take shape. She definitely has a thing for hydrangea, doesn't everyone? Her food styling is always so pretty, especially the shots taken out of doors. I like the photo below with the old lichen covered fence and the grey shingle shed in the background She seems quite at home in the garden and I suspect she is a confident clipper and snipper but not so much of a digger and planter Are you a clipper and snipper or a digger and planter I'm a little of both! Hope you enjoyed the tour Happy Gardening Photos via House Beautiful, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, O Magazine Ina Garten cookbooks
A Landscape (Iosif Krachkovsky, 1900)