Occasional journal posts in between gardening or working
Entries by MinxterBloom (134)
Eames and Morning Glories
Another case of "Heavenly Blue" but this vine is flinging itself through magenta bougenvilla.
The image appears in James Wagner's blog. He saw this combination at the Ray and Charles Eames House in Pacific Palisades, CA. He did not respond to email, so I did not want to post a full image.I have wondered what flowers might have grown in an Eames garden.
I do not see too much documentation on what the Eames couple enjoyed in flowers. I have always liked this fabric designed by them circa 1947. Here are a few quotes from the Eames partnership:
"Choose your corner, pick away at it carefully, intensely and to the best of your ability and that way you might change the world."
“We wanted to make the best for the most for the least”
“The same stars that shine down on Russia, shine down on the United States. From the sky, our cities would look much the same”
“Ray [Eames], who is my wife and not my brother.”
"You know what looks good can change, but what works works."
"My wife and I had made a commitment to disregard the sacred enclosure around a special set of phenomena called art; in our view preoccupation with respecting that boundary leads to an unfortunate and unwarranted limitation on the aesthetic experience."
"Tresemble" and Muscari
McClure and Zimmerman offer lovely bulbs. Here is "Tresemble," a white triandrus daffodil. Much like "Thalia" this moderately recurved daffie is more modest than a golden trumpet. I planted some on Sunday, with blue Muscari.
Click into the picture to go to Mc & Z.
Charleston House: Bells and Wolf(s)
Home to the Bells of Bloomsbury fame (Blooms-a-bury is such a gardener's pun!), Charleston House is a must-see for bookish gardeners.
Among the many fancies of that house and garden are astonishing textile patterns, a penchant for silver-foliaged flowers, and a droll, troll-style of painted furnature.
Vanessa Bell wrote in 1936, “The house seems full of young people in very high spirits, laughing a great deal at their own jokes… lying about in the garden which is simply a dithering blaze of flowers and butterflies and apples.”
I plan to paint two rooms this winter in some sort of homage to Vanessa Bell. More details later.
Heavenly Blue persists
into November: Above this patch, planted by R.I., is a huge beech tree. These leaves are coppery-butter yellow. The second view -- sideview of the blue trumpets -- is a patch of morning glory vines across the street. The yellow flowers are Jeruselem artichoke.
July 4 revisted
You will need to click the image to read this. The words are from a John McGahern quote I posted on July 4. How do you do the same with a passage of text? Go here to Wordle.