Tag archive for "eco living"

Garden Design Green Awards

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Garden Design Green Awards

1 Comment 17 February 2010

Sarah from Garden Design kindly sent me a link to the magazine’s Green Awards which is taking submissions until May this year. If you’re a garden design junkie you get to flick through images of beautiful design-based eco gardens; if you’re a garden designer you can submit one of your gardens.

One of my favourites so far is the Sculptural Chicago Rooftop and Urban Garden by dSpace Studio because, well, it’s on a roof and also features wonderful things like decking, sedum, grasses, native flowers, lavender and those unbelievable vintage Bertoia chairs.
dspace deckdspace studio gardendspace plexi lighting
I don’t usually like floor lights much – they often look bad in the daylight and blind you in the dark. But the lighting in this garden is really exceptional. Frosted plexi-glass lightboxes are totally at home in a swish little penthouse garden / living space like this.
modern organic fusionfusion
I also like the Modern Organic Garden by Fusion Landscape Designs Inc based in Portland, Oregan (above). It’s a gorgeous earthy rain garden with bamboo details, bespoke earthwork by Fiddlescape Designs and a stone bench made using local basalt stone. The main feature is the tiger wood ‘boardwalk’ over the garden which seperates a small living area (with lovely textiles) from a main dining area and smaller children’s dining platform.

For some reason these designs strike me as being particularly American. Perhaps because they lack the huge variety of plants you usually see in British gardens. We tend to be less sleek and put-together, and also less focussed on outdoor living spaces due to the good old British weather (it’s another cold, grey day and apparently spring is going to be delayed by about a month this year). A more plant-based approach comes from Michelle Derviss in the form of her Mendocino Coast garden (banner pic and below).
derviss1heathers
The focus of this garden is on a climate-adaptive and drought-resistant planting scheme. Her painterly approach to using purple and pink heathers, dwarf conifers and ornamental grasses – most of them ground-hugging to accentuate and aid the natural contours of the landscape – forms a beautiful carpet of colours.

I can’t wait to see who wins!

Living Jewellery

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Living Jewellery

1 Comment 25 January 2010

living jewellery
Clockwise from top left: necklace by Ceca Georgieva; mini terrarium necklace by Poppy Art; terrarium necklace by Warm Country Meadows; living necklace by Paula Hayes; Grass necklace by Danielle Allatta; Plant Ring by Cbijoux.

Banner pic: Moss ring by Adorn Jewellery

Not gardening-related in the strictest sense, but I had to link to this article I came across on Ecoterre. It’s about the next step in eco-jewellery: statement pieces with a living component. The extracting, manipulating, refining, weaving and dying processes involved in textile production are foregone in favour of natural materials in their raw state: picture long blades of vibrant grass, dense little pockets of moss and sturdy, paper-like foliage. The look is nouveau pagan – a celebration of nature in its small beauty rather than abundance.

The loopy, ribbon-style leaf necklace by Ceca Georgieva is a beauty. I love the idea that you could take some banana leaves, fold and knot them, wear as a neckpiece and then pop in the composter at the end of the night. Another artist who does wonderful work that emphasises the life cycle of her natural materials is Paula Hayes. I’m a huge fan of her sprouting necklaces. They have a natural, earthy appearance – the key to this look is subtle manipulation, letting the greenery speak for itself. There is something symbolic and lovely in her use of epiphytes – plants that grow on other plants, non-parasitc but relying on the structural support of their host. In Hayes’ vision, human bodies are also gardens.

Danielle Allatta’s grass necklace is a sculptural piece using individual blades of sharp, angular grass and wire coils. The seemingly haphazard arrangement suggests that this tangle of grass has not been worked over by human hands. It’s an eco-centric vision of design, one in which there is a harmonious relationship between living adornment and host, in which the delicacy and beauty of the former is held up for admiration and protection.

Most statement pieces are pretty unsustainable, prone to wilt and wither with age. As Paula Hayes acknowledges, they exist in the realm of art because they are conceptual, rather than practical. But terrarium necklaces present more possibility for longevity, and they’re popular on Etsy at the moment. Take a look at sellers Warm Country Meadows and Poppy Art. I love the Plant Ring by Cbijoux, a chunky terrarium-style appendage with a vibrant green plant in its centre. These are personal pieces of jewellery that will grow and change as they are worn. Perhaps the terrarium pendant is the newest expression of truly eco-conscious style – precious, sustainable and enduring.


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