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January 9, 2011

Pittsburgh! Part 3

Filed under: Decorating,Flowers,Parks,Shows and Tours,Travel,Winter — Judy @ 10:15 am

PHIPPS CONSERVATORY
One of the exceptional parts of this trip was visiting the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens in Schenley Park in Pittsburgh.

Phipps Conservatory

Phipps Conservatory

It was a gardener’s dream place! Built in the midst of one of Pittsburgh’s largest greenspaces, the historic Lord & Burnham glass and steel greenhouses were originally stocked with tropical plants from the 1893 Colombian Exposition in Chicago. The new entrance building built in 2005 is the first LEED® certified (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) visitor center in a public garden in the United States. Phipps is both historical and looking to the future!

This soaring, writhing, undulating glass chandelier sculpture by Dale Chihuly greets you in the Welcome Center.

Phipps entrance sculpture

Blown glass chandelier sculpture by Dale Chihuly at Phipps

Other glass sculptures by Chihuly like these can be found scattered throughout the plant exhibits too. I found that the ones with more organic shapes and colors and positioned in semi-believable locations were the ones that were more attractive to me.

More glass sculptures by Chihuly

More glass sculptures by Chihuly

Also at the Phipps were these intriguing glass sculptures by Hans Godo Frabel called “Longfellows.”

Frabel 'Longfellows'

'Longfellows' by Hans Godo Frabel

Frabel is a flame-work glass artist and the art he exhibited here takes the form of whimsical clowns, flower goblets, humanistic vines, reptiles and geometric shapes.

Lest you think that all we were attracted to at the Phipps was the art in the garden, I can assure you that were oohing and aahing over all of the plant exhibits. I had no idea there were so many varieties of my favorite type of fern, the maidenhairs. I gotta get me more!

Maidenhair ferns

Maidenhair ferns

The Cacti House (now called the Desert Room to reflect the variety of plants there) was added in 1902. Although I’m generally not too fond of prickly, stabbing types of plants, the specimens at Phipps were definitely ones to admire.

Desert Room with sculpture

Chihuly sculpture in the Desert Room

The most fun of all was the Winter Flower show there. Poinsettias, paperwhite narcissi, orchids, garlands, swags, huge Christmas trees sparkled and enchanted us in many whimsical vignettes sprinkled throughout the Phipps greenhouses.

Carved bear

Poinsettia Display in the Sunken Garden

Poinsettia Display in the Sunken Garden

And look at this! The display in the East Room was wild – purples, pinks, golds, silvers – and this pod of pink plastic flamingos checking out the melted Frosty the Snowman. And it looks like the koi in the pond were doing the same thing!

Flamingos, Melted Frosties, Koi

Holiday display in the East Room

Finally we are back at the Palm Court, one of the original rooms built in 1893 and where we started our tour of Phipps. It is 65 feet tall, the central focal point of the Conservatory, and where all who enter must pass through.

Snowman Mirror in the Palm Court

Snowman Mirror in the Palm Court

As we reflect on our quick trip to Pittsburgh, there is much to remember, but the best part will always be — Being with Family!

Family

Sisters Cathy and Sallie, and daughter Kelsey

December 4, 2010

Things past, and things to come

Filed under: Fall,Flowers,Grasses,Our gardens,Winter — Judy @ 11:59 pm

On Tuesday, I finally got a chance to get the last of my own gardens cleaned up and ready for the winter. The lawn received its last mowing, the gardens were “drive-by” mulched, and the grasses and other things that I usually leave for winter interest looked great. That is, until Wednesday when it rained about 5 inches, turned cold, and the snow “cement” arrived. Overnight, the grasses went from beautiful to smushed.

Grasses in fall 09   Grasses in snow cover

And the ‘Autumn joy’ sedums which usually dry and hold up all winter turned into mush.

Sedum with snow hats

But winter weather brings its own beauty. The rose hips glow against the icy blue snow.

Roses hips

The frozen crabapples will provide some delicious food for the birds very soon.

Frozen crabapples

And the butterfly bush still seems to want to beckon those butterflies that have long gone.

Buddleia with snow

The growing season might have ended up here in upstate New York for now, but if you look around you can see signs of what will come in the spring. The big fat buds of the rhododendron,

Icy Rhododendron Bud

the teeny buds of the azaleas,

Azalea buds

the fattening lilac buds,

Lilac buds in fall

and the quince buds are readying themselves to burst forth with color when spring returns.

Quince buds in ice

Remember that new Polemonium ‘Stairway to Heaven’ I told you about in the spring? What beautiful gold yellow fall-into-winter foliage it has! I’m looking forward to seeing its next transformation in the spring.

Polemonium in fall

Polemonium 'Stairway to Heaven' in Fall

 
Polemonium in spring

Polemonium 'Stairway to Heaven' in Spring


One might think that nothing goes on in the garden in the winter, but already there are signs of things to come!

October 28, 2010

Winner!

Filed under: Contests,Fall,Flowers,Miscellaneous — Judy @ 6:47 pm

Oh My! Our sunflower mix scan was chosen as the Silver Winner in the GGW Picture This contest for October. How thrilling as it is the first time to enter their monthly contest!

Sunflower mix]GGW Silver Award


I find it so much easier to arrange a composition on the flatbed scanner and get the picture right than to try to fiddle with my camera settings and compose something out in the field. Perhaps it is a matter of experience? I am largely self-taught in practically everything I do creatively – web design, graphics, sewing, cooking, . . . , and scanner photography. I haven’t got the depth of field thing mastered on my camera yet. Something more to work on!

October 18, 2010

Scanner Flowers

Filed under: Flowers,Miscellaneous — Judy @ 11:11 am

Over on the Gardening Gone Wild blog, they sponsor a monthly photo contest called ‘Picture This.’ The one for this month (here) is on scanner photography. As many of you know, that is one of our favorite methods and we love to use our images in various ways – printed on paper as cards or calendars like this . . .

Mixed flower card

or printed on fabric and made into pillows or bags, or used in decoupage on wood or glass followed by decorative painting such as for our birdhouses or clocks (explore our website at FleurDesigns).

My sister in Texas and I do this together so we have access to many different types of flowers. We like bright and colorful combinations since we mostly scan during the summers and create the fun stuff during the long winters (at least here in upstate New York). We love to surprise each other with the designs that we can come up with.

Mixed flower wreath

Essentially, our scanner photography consists of collecting some flowers and/or foliage or other botanical geegaws, laying them on the flat scanner bed, and pressing ‘scan.’ We have found, however, that the scanner depth of resolution makes a difference. My sister’s scanner broke and she had a difficult time finding another that was acceptable. My scanner, an old HP ScanJet 6200C, does a great job.

Iris

Quince primrose line

Once we have obtained the digital image, we trim it and might remove the scanner background in our photoediting software. At this point, it is essentially ready for use. We may further enhance it with various graphical elements such as borders or different backgrounds to create variations on the design as shown below. Even so, flowers remain the prime element in our designs!

Wildflowers with checks

This last image is one of our favorites! What could be better to celebrate fall than sunflowers?

Sunflower mix

All images and designs ©2001-2010 by Judith Cowles for FleurDesigns, Just the Gardener, and The Garden Worm blog. No material may be reproduced without explicit written permission.

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