Showing posts with label Rose garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rose garden. Show all posts

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Stop and Smell the Roses...

Here are some photos taken last week of the roses in our potager garden...


Above and Below: The view into the potager from the vineyard.

Below: The deep red Dublin Bay.

Below: In the pink - some old fashioned roses with wonderful perfume.

Below: A profusion of cream and white blooms...

Below: 'Sunset' and 'Wildfire'

Below: The pale mauve blooms of the roses at the end of the vines (they have gone over somewhat).

Monday, August 8, 2011

... a rose by any other name would smell as sweet...


We have now planted all the roses around the border to the potager. The potager lies patient in hibernation, with the brown winter hornbeams and the bare-twigged rose bushes. Most are English roses, in particular David Austen varieties (although we are definitely not going for the one stop shop look). There are a few old fashioned and some French varieties and well as many China roses.

We took much inspiration from Austen's Shropshire rose garden, Albrighton...




The roses we chose were...

Pinks

Gertrude Jekyl



Rosa Centifolia Muscosa


Chatreuse de Parma


Wife of Bath


Heritage


Zephirine Drouhin Climber


Whites

Memoire


Avalanche


Princess of Wales


Purples

Lilac Rose


Blue Sky


Dioressence


Kathryn Mansfield


Yellows

Charlotte


Jude of Obscure


Molineux


Yellow Charles Austin


Oranges

Amber Flush


Tequilla Sunrise



Wild Fire



Mari Dot


Reds


Black Beauty


Lady in Red


Dublin Bay


Loving Memory


Greens

Rosa Chinensis var Viridiflora

(technically the above is a rose, but the flowerheads are made up of multiple septals instead of petals. It works great in white and green flower arrangements).

Some more Austen Roses...



Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Chapel and Rose Garden...



We have started to design the chapel for Willowbrook Park. The picture above demonstrates the concept for the exterior of the chapel: a small stone, English styled, country church with Victorian Gothic-revival elements (and lots of climbing roses).

Exterior

Above: The front elevation for the chapel.
Note the gothic bell tower and over-sized gothic-arch doors (about 10 feet tall)

Below: The side elevation as viewed from the main courtyard.
Note the castellated, English styled walls, and the stone buttresses.


Here are some pictures of similarly styled chapels:




And a Gothic potting shed for good measure:


Doors

The chapel doors will be solid wood, probably oak, with large ornate hinges. Around the door we will plant lots of rambling roses, which will tie in to the theme of the chapel garden, that of a medieval monastic rose garden / walled garden.



Above photo from Architect Design




And a beautifully carved arch above a doorway...


Gardens

We want to make the gardens as picturesque as possible in order to provide an abundant variety of backdrops to make the photographer's job easier, and to ensure that a couple's special day is just right. Here are some pictures of the direction in which we are going with the gardens...











We hope that by offering a variety of locations around the park in which people can celebrate their personal events, we will be able to cater to a wide range of tastes and requirements. For example, a couple could get married in the Chapel, of by The Lake, in the Roman Rotunda, in the Orangery in the Orchard, or simply on the Formal lawn and terrace. Then they could celebrate with a reception either in the ballroom or in marquee, again, in a setting of their choosing.


Interior

We want to create a very traditional English 'high-church' feel to the inside of the chapel with lots of architectural detailing and masonry features. Willowbrook Park is all about having the detail and having it in abundance. People who come here will come for the drama, therefore one can not make a half hearted attempt at being dramatic, nor try to water it down. It is this attention to the detailing and finish which will set this venue above the rest. For those who would like an entirely non-religious service there will be plenty of other sites around the park catering to their needs.


Above: Two Piranesi sketches for baldachinos for over altars (wishful thinking!)

Below: Interior concepts.




I like these photos for the feeling or atmosphere which they evoke. All spaces, but especially spiritual spaces need to create an atmosphere which draws people's emotions in a certain direction, in this case upwards, through the ephemeral to the eternal.
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