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GARDEN VISIT: WITHYCOMBE, MOUNT WILSON Dogwood (Cornus spp.) fruit. The formal garden, with 19th century French Val D’Osne cast iron statue of a bathing lady. Withycombe is one of the original properties of Mount Wilson. The house was built between 1878 and 1880 for the family of politician and pastoralist George Henry Cox. It was purchased by Ruth and Victor White, parentsof
WONDERGROUND PRINT JOURNAL Wonderground, a biannual print journal dedicated to nature writing, asks questions of country and culture, people and place, politics and plants.It is the physical manifestation of The Planthunter digital platform. Wonderground is published by The Planthunter team and features essays, long-form interviews, poetry and profiles by local and international emerging writers, big thinkers and GROWING A DYE GARDEN Growing a Dye Garden. Tucked away in the Dandenong Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Myf Walker’s garden is filled with botanical treasures that any serious natural dyer would love to get their hands on. She takes the leaves, roots and flowers of these plants and, without the use of any chemicals, turns textiles into beautiful, wearable BILL HENSON'S POST-INDUSTRIAL WALLED GARDEN Bill Henson’s garden, then, is the work of a great artist. This story is an excerpt from The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos and Plants by Georgina Reid with photography by Daniel Shipp. Published by Thames & Hudson and designed by Evi O Studio. Order your signed copyhere.
THE DIRT: TRACEY DEEP People. Tracey Deep is a curator of nature. She transforms found objects, old industrial materials, and bits and pieces of the natural world – all of which are often discarded without a thought – into seriously beautiful sculptures and installations, heightening and celebrating their unique forms, textures, and colours. Tracey'sRedfern studio.
DIY: DYEING WITH TURMERIC Fill a saucepan with water, add turmeric and vinegar and bring to the boil. Once water is boiling add the fabric. Boil until the fabric is the colour you would like it. Take the fabric out of the saucepan, run under cold water and then unwrap. This is the fun bit, its kind oflike opening a
THE DIRT: DANIEL BAFFSKY ‘Plants make people feel good,’ says Daniel as we wander through a rooftop garden designed by him and his team at landscape architecture studio 360°.Part of the Kinghorn Cancer Centre in Darlinghurst, Sydney, the garden is a multifaceted space – one where patients gain respite from treatments, doctors share good and bad news, and families reconnect during incredibly stressful times. DESIGNER PROFILE: JUAN GRIMM Designer Profile: Juan Grimm. 29.08.2019. Words by. Lucy Munro. Issue 66. Art & Design. Gardens. On the coast of Los Villos in Chile, a garden balances on the edge of a clifftop, limbs of wandering shrubs crawling over the rock face towards the depths of the Pacific Ocean below. The architect of the seaside shelter, Juan Grimm, can be found INTERVIEW: HUGH MAIN Hugh Main is one of the quiet achievers of the Sydney landscape design scene. He’s co-founder and director of design and construction company Spirit Level and is a passionate and highly talented garden craftsman. Hugh’s skill is in designing landscapes that are both extremely sculptural and refined, as well as entirely grounded andnatural.
HOME - THE PLANTHUNTERREADEXPLORELEARNBOTANICACULTUREGARDENS Home - The Planthunter. 76. THE LAYERS. ‘Live in the layers, not in the litter’, instructed poet Stanley Kunitz. We’re taking his directions to heart as we explore what it means to inhabit the spaces in-between. The garden and the wilderness, decay and delight, a forestand a
GARDEN VISIT: WITHYCOMBE, MOUNT WILSON Dogwood (Cornus spp.) fruit. The formal garden, with 19th century French Val D’Osne cast iron statue of a bathing lady. Withycombe is one of the original properties of Mount Wilson. The house was built between 1878 and 1880 for the family of politician and pastoralist George Henry Cox. It was purchased by Ruth and Victor White, parentsof
WONDERGROUND PRINT JOURNAL Wonderground, a biannual print journal dedicated to nature writing, asks questions of country and culture, people and place, politics and plants.It is the physical manifestation of The Planthunter digital platform. Wonderground is published by The Planthunter team and features essays, long-form interviews, poetry and profiles by local and international emerging writers, big thinkers and GROWING A DYE GARDEN Growing a Dye Garden. Tucked away in the Dandenong Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Myf Walker’s garden is filled with botanical treasures that any serious natural dyer would love to get their hands on. She takes the leaves, roots and flowers of these plants and, without the use of any chemicals, turns textiles into beautiful, wearable BILL HENSON'S POST-INDUSTRIAL WALLED GARDEN Bill Henson’s garden, then, is the work of a great artist. This story is an excerpt from The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos and Plants by Georgina Reid with photography by Daniel Shipp. Published by Thames & Hudson and designed by Evi O Studio. Order your signed copyhere.
THE DIRT: TRACEY DEEP People. Tracey Deep is a curator of nature. She transforms found objects, old industrial materials, and bits and pieces of the natural world – all of which are often discarded without a thought – into seriously beautiful sculptures and installations, heightening and celebrating their unique forms, textures, and colours. Tracey'sRedfern studio.
DIY: DYEING WITH TURMERIC Fill a saucepan with water, add turmeric and vinegar and bring to the boil. Once water is boiling add the fabric. Boil until the fabric is the colour you would like it. Take the fabric out of the saucepan, run under cold water and then unwrap. This is the fun bit, its kind oflike opening a
THE DIRT: DANIEL BAFFSKY ‘Plants make people feel good,’ says Daniel as we wander through a rooftop garden designed by him and his team at landscape architecture studio 360°.Part of the Kinghorn Cancer Centre in Darlinghurst, Sydney, the garden is a multifaceted space – one where patients gain respite from treatments, doctors share good and bad news, and families reconnect during incredibly stressful times. DESIGNER PROFILE: JUAN GRIMM Designer Profile: Juan Grimm. 29.08.2019. Words by. Lucy Munro. Issue 66. Art & Design. Gardens. On the coast of Los Villos in Chile, a garden balances on the edge of a clifftop, limbs of wandering shrubs crawling over the rock face towards the depths of the Pacific Ocean below. The architect of the seaside shelter, Juan Grimm, can be found INTERVIEW: HUGH MAIN Hugh Main is one of the quiet achievers of the Sydney landscape design scene. He’s co-founder and director of design and construction company Spirit Level and is a passionate and highly talented garden craftsman. Hugh’s skill is in designing landscapes that are both extremely sculptural and refined, as well as entirely grounded andnatural.
A LAYERED AND LOVED BRISBANE GARDEN End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber TALL TREE TALES: INGA SIMPSON'S BOOK OF AUSTRALIAN TREES End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber PET FRIENDLY PLANTS: A GUIDE Truth, beauty, chaos and plants. Serial plant muncher, John Deere. Image by Pol Newsome. A recent study revealed that Australian’s have one of the largest pet populations in the world, with more than half of all households (5.7 million roughly) owning at least one animal friend.Of these estimated 24 million pets, the most popular species are dogs, cats, birds and fish, many of them living in GROWING A DYE GARDEN Growing a Dye Garden. Tucked away in the Dandenong Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Myf Walker’s garden is filled with botanical treasures that any serious natural dyer would love to get their hands on. She takes the leaves, roots and flowers of these plants and, without the use of any chemicals, turns textiles into beautiful, wearable SAY MY NAME: ON SPEAKING THE INDIGENOUS NAMES OF PLANTS End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber GAMMA GARDENS: ATOMIC PLANT BREEDING In 1959, an ‘Atomic Gardening Society’ was founded in the U.K. by Muriel Howorth, after she received an unusually large irradiated peanut plant as a gift. The society aimed to promote citizen science, and acted as “a cultural body for the guidance of atomic plant-mutation experimentation”. THE DIRT: DANIEL BAFFSKY ‘Plants make people feel good,’ says Daniel as we wander through a rooftop garden designed by him and his team at landscape architecture studio 360°.Part of the Kinghorn Cancer Centre in Darlinghurst, Sydney, the garden is a multifaceted space – one where patients gain respite from treatments, doctors share good and bad news, and families reconnect during incredibly stressful times. THE ART OF REFUSAL: LUCIENNE RICKARD'S EXTINCTION STUDIES When Lucienne was dreaming up Extinction Studies, she became fixated on the idea of pentimento, a visual art term deriving from the word repentance.Pentimento refers to the part of a painting that’s been covered over by a later painting, and specifically to the re-emergenceof that sublayer.
HOW TO PROPAGATE HOYAS Alan taking a cutting off a Hoya 'Mini Belle' CUT IT! Take a cutting from a healthy plant in spring/summer. This is the best time to propagate hoyas as it’s their growing season so they’ll develop roots and grow faster than during winter when they’re sleeping. MAKE YOUR OWN SMUDGE STICK Pure cotton thread or fine string. Flower scissors. To make your smudge stick: Cut the branches to the same length, about 20cm, leaving a few centimetres of stem at one end to use as a handle. Arrange the stems in a bundle and bind and knot the end of the string (leaving a 10cm tail) to secure the branches together tightly at the stem end. HOME - THE PLANTHUNTERREADEXPLORELEARNBOTANICACULTUREGARDENS Home - The Planthunter. 76. THE LAYERS. ‘Live in the layers, not in the litter’, instructed poet Stanley Kunitz. We’re taking his directions to heart as we explore what it means to inhabit the spaces in-between. The garden and the wilderness, decay and delight, a forestand a
GARDEN VISIT: WITHYCOMBE, MOUNT WILSON Dogwood (Cornus spp.) fruit. The formal garden, with 19th century French Val D’Osne cast iron statue of a bathing lady. Withycombe is one of the original properties of Mount Wilson. The house was built between 1878 and 1880 for the family of politician and pastoralist George Henry Cox. It was purchased by Ruth and Victor White, parentsof
PET FRIENDLY PLANTS: A GUIDE Truth, beauty, chaos and plants. Serial plant muncher, John Deere. Image by Pol Newsome. A recent study revealed that Australian’s have one of the largest pet populations in the world, with more than half of all households (5.7 million roughly) owning at least one animal friend.Of these estimated 24 million pets, the most popular species are dogs, cats, birds and fish, many of them living in GROWING A DYE GARDEN Growing a Dye Garden. Tucked away in the Dandenong Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Myf Walker’s garden is filled with botanical treasures that any serious natural dyer would love to get their hands on. She takes the leaves, roots and flowers of these plants and, without the use of any chemicals, turns textiles into beautiful, wearable WONDERGROUND JOURNAL: ISSUE ONE Wonderground is a spirited and intelligent print journal exploring the human connection to landscape, plants and place. It is the physical manifestation of The Planthunter digital platform. Issue One release: March 2021Issue Two release: October 2021 Issue One: Arise and Shine (Issue Two content TBC) Featuring a range HOW-TO: PROPAGATING NATIVE PLANTS WITH NANCY SHAW The cutting should be around four fingers long. Remove around 2/3 of the leaves from the cutting, leaving a couple at the top. You can chop or pinch them off, depending on the plant. Cut the leaves at the top in half if they’re large. You’ll be left with leaf nodes, but very few leaves! Planting the cutting. THE DIRT: TRACEY DEEP People. Tracey Deep is a curator of nature. She transforms found objects, old industrial materials, and bits and pieces of the natural world – all of which are often discarded without a thought – into seriously beautiful sculptures and installations, heightening and celebrating their unique forms, textures, and colours. Tracey'sRedfern studio.
DIY: DYEING WITH TURMERIC Fill a saucepan with water, add turmeric and vinegar and bring to the boil. Once water is boiling add the fabric. Boil until the fabric is the colour you would like it. Take the fabric out of the saucepan, run under cold water and then unwrap. This is the fun bit, its kind oflike opening a
MAKE YOUR OWN SMUDGE STICK Pure cotton thread or fine string. Flower scissors. To make your smudge stick: Cut the branches to the same length, about 20cm, leaving a few centimetres of stem at one end to use as a handle. Arrange the stems in a bundle and bind and knot the end of the string (leaving a 10cm tail) to secure the branches together tightly at the stem end. HOW TO PROPAGATE HOYAS Alan taking a cutting off a Hoya 'Mini Belle' CUT IT! Take a cutting from a healthy plant in spring/summer. This is the best time to propagate hoyas as it’s their growing season so they’ll develop roots and grow faster than during winter when they’re sleeping. HOME - THE PLANTHUNTERREADEXPLORELEARNBOTANICACULTUREGARDENS Home - The Planthunter. 76. THE LAYERS. ‘Live in the layers, not in the litter’, instructed poet Stanley Kunitz. We’re taking his directions to heart as we explore what it means to inhabit the spaces in-between. The garden and the wilderness, decay and delight, a forestand a
GARDEN VISIT: WITHYCOMBE, MOUNT WILSON Dogwood (Cornus spp.) fruit. The formal garden, with 19th century French Val D’Osne cast iron statue of a bathing lady. Withycombe is one of the original properties of Mount Wilson. The house was built between 1878 and 1880 for the family of politician and pastoralist George Henry Cox. It was purchased by Ruth and Victor White, parentsof
PET FRIENDLY PLANTS: A GUIDE Truth, beauty, chaos and plants. Serial plant muncher, John Deere. Image by Pol Newsome. A recent study revealed that Australian’s have one of the largest pet populations in the world, with more than half of all households (5.7 million roughly) owning at least one animal friend.Of these estimated 24 million pets, the most popular species are dogs, cats, birds and fish, many of them living in GROWING A DYE GARDEN Growing a Dye Garden. Tucked away in the Dandenong Ranges just outside of Melbourne, Myf Walker’s garden is filled with botanical treasures that any serious natural dyer would love to get their hands on. She takes the leaves, roots and flowers of these plants and, without the use of any chemicals, turns textiles into beautiful, wearable WONDERGROUND JOURNAL: ISSUE ONE Wonderground is a spirited and intelligent print journal exploring the human connection to landscape, plants and place. It is the physical manifestation of The Planthunter digital platform. Issue One release: March 2021Issue Two release: October 2021 Issue One: Arise and Shine (Issue Two content TBC) Featuring a range HOW-TO: PROPAGATING NATIVE PLANTS WITH NANCY SHAW The cutting should be around four fingers long. Remove around 2/3 of the leaves from the cutting, leaving a couple at the top. You can chop or pinch them off, depending on the plant. Cut the leaves at the top in half if they’re large. You’ll be left with leaf nodes, but very few leaves! Planting the cutting. THE DIRT: TRACEY DEEP People. Tracey Deep is a curator of nature. She transforms found objects, old industrial materials, and bits and pieces of the natural world – all of which are often discarded without a thought – into seriously beautiful sculptures and installations, heightening and celebrating their unique forms, textures, and colours. Tracey'sRedfern studio.
DIY: DYEING WITH TURMERIC Fill a saucepan with water, add turmeric and vinegar and bring to the boil. Once water is boiling add the fabric. Boil until the fabric is the colour you would like it. Take the fabric out of the saucepan, run under cold water and then unwrap. This is the fun bit, its kind oflike opening a
MAKE YOUR OWN SMUDGE STICK Pure cotton thread or fine string. Flower scissors. To make your smudge stick: Cut the branches to the same length, about 20cm, leaving a few centimetres of stem at one end to use as a handle. Arrange the stems in a bundle and bind and knot the end of the string (leaving a 10cm tail) to secure the branches together tightly at the stem end. HOW TO PROPAGATE HOYAS Alan taking a cutting off a Hoya 'Mini Belle' CUT IT! Take a cutting from a healthy plant in spring/summer. This is the best time to propagate hoyas as it’s their growing season so they’ll develop roots and grow faster than during winter when they’re sleeping. A LAYERED AND LOVED BRISBANE GARDEN End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber TALL TREE TALES: INGA SIMPSON'S BOOK OF AUSTRALIAN TREES End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber PET FRIENDLY PLANTS: A GUIDE Truth, beauty, chaos and plants. Serial plant muncher, John Deere. Image by Pol Newsome. A recent study revealed that Australian’s have one of the largest pet populations in the world, with more than half of all households (5.7 million roughly) owning at least one animal friend.Of these estimated 24 million pets, the most popular species are dogs, cats, birds and fish, many of them living in BOOK REVIEW: SPIRIT OF THE GARDEN End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber BILL HENSON'S POST-INDUSTRIAL WALLED GARDEN Bill Henson’s garden, then, is the work of a great artist. This story is an excerpt from The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos and Plants by Georgina Reid with photography by Daniel Shipp. Published by Thames & Hudson and designed by Evi O Studio. Order your signed copyhere.
THE WONDER OF SEEDS (AND HOW TO SUCCESSFULLY GERMINATE Moisture. All seeds need moisture to start the process of germination. The seed coat absorbs water, the seed embryo enlarges and, kaboom, out breaks the root (radicle) followed by the shoot (plumule) which develops into the leaf and stem. Water your seeds regularly (1-2 times per day depending on the weather), so they never dry out once sown. SAY MY NAME: ON SPEAKING THE INDIGENOUS NAMES OF PLANTS End. Author Georgina Reid is a writer and designer, and the founding editor of The Planthunter.In addition to editing The Planthunter, Georgina contributes to a range of design and culture publications and speaks regularly about her work.Georgina’s first book, The Planthunter: Truth, Beauty, Chaos, and Plants was released in Australia by Thames and Hudson in 2018, and in the USA by Timber THE WORLD'S UGLIEST PLANTS In 2009, the British Royal Horticultural Society asked readers of The Telegraph one of the great questions of the universe: What is the world’s ugliest plant? In the poll that followed, ten plants were exposed as the most revolting of Mother Nature’s species, with the corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum) taking out top spot as the most hideous plant by public opinion. DESIGNER PROFILE: JUAN GRIMM Designer Profile: Juan Grimm. 29.08.2019. Words by. Lucy Munro. Issue 66. Art & Design. Gardens. On the coast of Los Villos in Chile, a garden balances on the edge of a clifftop, limbs of wandering shrubs crawling over the rock face towards the depths of the Pacific Ocean below. The architect of the seaside shelter, Juan Grimm, can be found WORMWOOD: THE GODDESS HERB Wormwood is the star ingredient in Absinthe, invented in Switzerland in the late 1700s by Dr. Pierre Ordinaire, and perfected and popularised in France by Major Dubied and his son in law, Henri-Louis Pernod. In 1905 the notorious Absinthe murders caused the first major sales ban in Switzerland.Search Go Menu
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We are gracious, we are graceless, we are occasionally graceful. We try, we fail, we try again. We look to the world around us, a place abounding in grace, and we are grateful. This month we’re considering grace, considering life, considering plants, considering gardens. We’re asking what it means to live, with grace.ISSUE 72.
GRACE
JAC SEMMLER’S MAD PERENNIAL GARDENGardens Jac Semmler
has created a perennial wonderland in suburban Melbourne. A bit of whimsy, a bunch of madness and a lot of fun! ONCE UPON A TREE WAR Culture Bede Brennon dives into a complex and venomous debate over weeds and street trees in a quiet country town.1/2
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ON THE OTHER SIDE OF LOSS LIES LOVECulture A personal
exploration of the relationship between ecological grief and transformation by Georgina Reid GHOSTLY GARDENS AND EARTHLY MEMORIESGardens A tale of
ghost gardens and stories from the soil. LIFE IS COMPLICATED AND MYSTERIOUS AND DOGMATISM IS BORINGGardens On making
unconstrained, ecologically rich, meaningful and beautiful gardens MICROBIAL LOVE: AN EARTHY CHAT WITH THE LAND GARDENERSBotanica , Harvest
A guide to deep soil appreciation with two of the most fanatical composters we've ever met. RIVER GARDEN DIARIES: ALL PROSPECT, NO REFUGEGardens What to do
with a windy garden? LIFE LESSONS: FLORIST MELANIE STAPLETONPeople A chat about
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PLANTS ARE NOT OBJECTS: A SPIKY PHOTO ESSAYGardens A visit to
the Huntington Desert Garden and a lesson in non-objectification ofplants.
PLANT / LIFE: JO FERGUSONGardens , People
A visit to a soulful coastal garden on the Mornington Peninsula. GARDEN VISIT: BEN SHAW’S PERMACULTURE OASIS Gardens Visit a lush and delicious permaculture garden with us! FIONA BROCKHOFF’S SUBLIME GARDEN WONDERLANDArt & Design ,
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FROM CONTROL TO CONNECTION: A NEW ETHOS OF CARE For a very long time, humans have equated care with control. But what if true care is more closely related to chaos? What if, in allowing space for chaos, we can more fully care for ourselves and the worldaround us?
WILD: THE HEALING RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NATURE AND GRIEF Wild nature, in contrast to the urban landscape, is a place that invites the grieving to grieve. It does not seek to silence a damaged, confused heart or distract it with noise and activity THE WAY OF THE GARDENER I am committed to tending to this world as a gardener. I am committed to cultivating new shoots, new stories, new hopes, new futures. I do this work with dirt under my nails, with curiosity, reverence and respect. And I wonder, is there any better way to be in the world right now than the way of the gardener – aware, engaged and in love? WILDERNESS AND GARDEN-MAKING, POST-INTERNET As garden-makers in a post-Internet world we must labour thoughtfully, we must respect wilderness, acknowledge culture, and demand that our new Anthropocentric gardens perform at a previously unforeseen level, both aesthetically and ecologically.2/4
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MICROBIAL LOVE: AN EARTHY CHAT WITH THE LAND GARDENERSBotanica , Harvest
A guide to deep soil appreciation with two of the most fanatical composters we've ever met. WHAT TREE WILL YOU BE WHEN YOU DIE? Culture Creating new life from death with memorial forests. ON THE OTHER SIDE OF LOSS LIES LOVECulture A personal
exploration of the relationship between ecological grief and transformation by Georgina Reid GARDEN VISIT: BEN SHAW’S PERMACULTURE OASIS Gardens Visit a lush and delicious permaculture garden with us! GHOSTLY GARDENS AND EARTHLY MEMORIESGardens A tale of
ghost gardens and stories from the soil. DANCING WITH DIVERSITY: CLIMATE-PROOFING NARDOO HILLS RESERVEBotanica An
innovative and ambitious approach to restoration ecology at Nardoo Hills Bush Heritage reserve HEALING WOMEN, HEALING THE EARTH: AN INTERVIEW WITH JANE HARDWICKECOLLINGS
Culture Freya Latona chats with women's mysteries teacher and founder of the school of sharmanic womencraft, Jane Hardwicke-Collings. PLANTS ARE NOT OBJECTS: A SPIKY PHOTO ESSAYGardens A visit to
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SUPER BLOOM: NEW FLORAL FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC PLANTING DESIGN Gardens What does it take to make engaging, dynamic and loved public spaces?View more
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