Blog Description

A French-Inspired Garden and Home by Judith Stringham
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts

Beautiful Outdoor Ivy Topiary Growing Tips

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Ivy topiaries are a beautiful way to add greenery to your home and garden all year. But, unusually prolonged freezing weather can damage or kill an ivy grown in a container outside.  



Outdoor Ivy Topiary Growing Tips
Ivy is fairly drought tolerant and cold hardy, easy to train on a topiary frame, grows into shape within a year or two, and looks good during every season. 

Ivy grown in containers are excellent plants for decks, porches, and structured gardens. 

Pink Crepe Myrtle | Why Southern Gardeners Love Them

Saturday, August 29, 2020

A stunning pink crepe myrtle tree grows on a small farmholding down a country road near me. The tree is an example of why crepe myrtles have been staples in Deep South gardens and yards for generations.  



Pink crepe myrtle tree in full bloom is a favorite of southern gardeners
For over twenty years I have admired the beautiful tree covered in fluffy pink blossoms as I travel from my home to the closest town for shopping. 

French Prints Shadowbox | Tips for Creating Your Own

Sunday, August 2, 2020

 A Paper Series Post 

Create a shadowbox with reproduction watercolor French prints to add an inexpensive French country look to any room in your house. By using prints collected during a trip with family or friends, your shadowbox will also remind you of special memories. 

Read about how I created a blue and white shadowbox to hang in my bedroom and get ideas for your own shadowbox. I have a few tips for finding small prints to use, for how to arrange the prints, and for using special items to add a little pizzazz! 


French Prints Shadowbox with Tips for Creating your own
Reproduction watercolor prints in soft blues, greens, and neutrals go well with most French country decor. 

Breath of Spring | French Country Wire Basket

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Artificial narcissus in a French wire basket adds a breath of Spring to my post and beam country house. One of the joys of living in the countryside is seeing the earth awaken from Winter. And, one of the first signs of the earth awakening outside around my house is daffodils. 


Breath of Spring French Country Wire Basket of Narcissus
Once the narcissus/daffodils begin blooming outside, I bring some inside to awaken the house from Winter. 

But, I also want to look out the windows and kitchen sunspace to see daffodils swaying in the breeze in the tall rye grasses. If I cut them all to bring inside, there are none to see outside. To enjoy daffodils inside and out, I create some bouquets inside using artificial narcissus.

Welcome Fall | Front Porch, Table, Centerpiece, Mantel, Kitchen

Tuesday, September 17, 2019



Welcome Fall into your home with your front porch, table, centerpieces, mantel, and kitchen. I gathered up Fall decorating ideas at Botanic Bleu, right here in one post, to give you the newest ideas of how to celebrate Fall at your house. Plus, instructions and DIY tips are in every post to help you create similar Fall decor in your home. 



Welcome Fall decorating ideas with twisty stem white pumpkins
Fall is just a week away in the Northern Hemisphere and begins September 23. Pumpkins arrived at my favorite local nursery this weekend, and I am ready to decorate for Fall at my house. 

A look back at how I decorated for Fall in the past inspires me to try something new and different each year. I hope these ideas will do the same for you! 

If you receive my posts in an email sent directly to your inbox, click on the title of the post in the email to continue reading the entire article. 

3 Design Factors for Exterior Stairs

Saturday, July 20, 2019

{Disclosure: If you purchase items from Botanic Bleu, I receive compensation for your purchase. See my Disclosure and Privacy Policy for more information.} 


Tips for designing beautiful exterior wood stairs in the backyard to lead to a second floor storage area above the garage include design ideas for style, safety, and durability. 

If you have ever fallen down steep stairs, you know how important good design is to building stairs. Like all good designs, each of the three factors of style, safety, and durability is intertwined with the other two. Each decision for how to create the new stairs was based on all of these factors. 



3 design factors for exterior wood stairs include style, safety, and durability
Finished last winter, the stairs are beautiful to see from inside looking out through our dining room windows. 

Vintage Valentines Display Tips

Monday, February 4, 2019




Tips to display vintage Valentines will give you ideas how to add a treasured Valentine to your home's decor without going all out in every room or on every surface with Valentine decorations. With a single treasured Valentine and a handful of complementary items, you can celebrate the day dedicated to love in your usual decorating style. 


It's a party! 
A Vintage Valentine's Day Blog Hop! 

Thanks to Amber at Follow the Yellow Brick Home for organizing over 20 blogs to share ideas using vintage Valentines with you for your home. You can find links to all of the posts at the end. 

If you are coming from Katie at Let's Add Sprinkles, you already have some good ideas for how to use vintage Valentines. If you haven't been to Katie's blog yet, you don't want to miss it! Katie and I live within 15 minutes of each other and are friends in real life, not just online friends. 


Vintage Valentines display tips for framed batik fabric Valentine
Whether you are having a party or merely want to add a touch of romance for the month of February, here are some tips to decorate for Valentine's day with an extra special vintage Valentine.  

Christmas French Market Basket

Saturday, November 24, 2018


Get your Christmas decorating organized by gathering supplies into one place, like a French market basket. 


Every little bit of organization in the busy, busy, busy, busiest season of the year helps your day go well and helps you get more done just when you need more time. 



Christmas French market basket for gathering Christmas decorations
The number one organization tip that helps me the most, at any time of the year, is to gather supplies I will be using for a project into one spot where I can find everything quickly. 

Pine Chest Vignettes | Fall and Winter

Sunday, August 12, 2018


F A L L   &   W I N T E R  

PART 2 OF A 2-PART SERIES 


Pine Chest Vignette for Fall with Boo Boo Pumpkins
Last week you saw Part 1, Spring & Summer, vignettes on the pine chest that sits between my living room and kitchen. All with tips for how, where, and why to place items in arrangements. 

Here is Part 2, a collection of fall and winter vignettes. The collection is filled with easy to find, easy to do, and inexpensive items, and every arrangement has tips about how to create similar ones in your home.

Garden Shed Budget Wood Butcher Block Counter

Thursday, May 17, 2018



Countertops Part 3 | Garden Shed 

Butcher Block 

The third in a series of three posts about budget wise countertops. 


Garden sheds are buildings made from dreams, after building the main house. Years of sketching diagrams on long winter nights, of saving reclaimed materials, and of collecting photos stuffed into shoeboxes and garden shed Pinterest boards keep the dream alive. 

Most often a garden shed is built with an even tighter budget than your home. Salvaged windows, doors, sinks, faucets, and counters along with DIY homeowners play major roles in making a garden shed affordable for most of us. 

The le jardin château (garden castle) in my backyard fits that description almost to a T. 


Budget Wood Butcher Block Counter In Backyard Garden Shed

Christmas Exterior Decorations Viewed From Inside

Tuesday, November 28, 2017


Christmas wreaths on iron driveway gates, front doors, and windows are beautiful to see as you drive by or attend a party at a friend's house during the holidays. I love seeing fresh garlands, Willamsburg-style fruit decorations, and lighted trees in yards. It IS a wonderful time of the year when houses are decorated on the outside.  




fresh-cut-christmas-tree-galvanized-bucket-outside
All of those beautiful exterior decorations are visible to people looking at houses from outside the house. What about looking FROM INSIDE the house? Can you see your exterior Christmas decorations when you are inside looking out? Chances are you cannot. 

This year, create some exterior Christmas decorations visible to everyone inside your house as they look out glass doors and windows. Every time you pass by the window or door, you can glimpse a little Christmas that will make your heart glad and experience a little French 

joie de vivre 


Live Christmas Tree Buying Tips

Wednesday, November 22, 2017


FIVE Tips for Buying Live Christmas Trees 


Fresh live Christmas trees usually go on sale in the Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex around the day after Thanksgiving. I was a little surprised and a lot excited to see live Fraser Fir trees for sale at the local Lowe's the Sunday BEFORE Thanksgiving. 

I hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving filled with rest, relaxation, and rejuvenation. Then on Friday, find your perfect live Christmas tree. 


live-christmas-tree-buying-tips

Pop Up Home Business Wholesale Market Access

Thursday, October 26, 2017


Wholesale Market Access  

Starting a Pop Up Home Business Series
Topic #2 


If you are turning your dreams of a home business into a reality, then Starting a Pop Up Home Business Series is a good resource for you. Knowing how to start a small business can be a challenge, especially for those of us who do not have a college degree in business. The good news is you don't have to have a business degree to start a small business. 

But you do need to research what to do. 

Pop Up Home Business Location

Tuesday, October 17, 2017


Home Business Location  

Starting a Pop Up Home Business Series
Topic #1 - Location, Location, Location 


Have you ever... Thought about starting a small business you could run from your home? Are you... Daydreaming about styling beautiful displays filled with things you love? Would you... Offer vintage, antique, handmade, unique, or one-of-a-kind items you have found and breathed new life into with fresh paint and updated hardware? How about selling new items from select wholesalers in a style you have a hard time finding in local shops yourself? 


Dreaming of a business flyer........... ?
french-country-christmas-event-flyer
Yes? 

Would you like some tips on how to turn your dream into a new business reality?

Ivy Heart Topiary in Bunny Pot

Monday, March 21, 2016

Minimalist white Winter is over, and 
true love blue Spring is back. 

I want to have more white in my house. 
I truly do. 


Until I see another beautiful ceramic flower pot with blue. 
Who can resist that adorable bleu bunny?

Oh, yes, all of you who love green, or yellow, or red, or neutrals, or......... 
Those of you who love green, this pattern comes in green also. 
HomeGoods... 

A Camera Right For You - Step 1

Wednesday, February 17, 2016


How do you find the camera that is right for you? 
A question that everyone ponders...

maybe only 30 minutes,
(fast shoppers)

or a couple of hours, or maybe longer...
when camera shopping.

Current Camera - Received as a Birthday Present 8 Years Ago

Do you walk into the closest big-box electronics store 
and start looking at cameras on display? 
Or, perhaps you are in the store already for something else, 
and the camera display catches your eye,
the cute little red one (blue one in my case) that is on sale
Then when you leave the store you have a cute little red blue new camera.


Some of my cameras from MANY years ago


I've bought point-and-shoot cameras that way all my life,
using them for travel and for family photos, but if you are like me 
and are considering buying your first DSLR (Digital Single-Lens Reflex)
that costs a lot more than point-and-shoot cameras, you probably
could use some tips for choosing such a big-ticket item.

Are you ready to start your quest to find a camera right for you?
In a series of posts, you will read about how to search for
the camera right for you.




Get organized by keeping notes on your search
in a special notebook (hard copy or on your computer)
because what you find will include
facts, figures, and prices that will become a jumble
in your mind unless you write them down.
Include the dates, sources, and web addresses where you found the information.

Now might be the time to create a new PINTEREST board
dedicated to your search for a new DSLR camera.
Begin by PINing this first post and then PINing
all of the posts in this series as they are published.


Ready...  

Suggestions for how to choose 
the camera that is right for you

✯ 1...  Analyze how you will use the camera. 


Look at the old photos that you have taken to see patterns 
for the kinds of photos you take or that you want to take.

Do you take pictures that show full views of rooms, 
photos taken under several kinds of light sources, close-ups of 
food for sharing recipes, telephoto shots of birds, outdoor scenery, 
super close shots of plants and flowers with blurred backgrounds, 
or video demonstrations for DIY projects?  

Knowing what kinds of photos you want to take helps
in choosing which kinds of lenses and what accessories you may need.



My list of the kinds of photos I want to take includes
close ups of decor arrangements, full views of rooms, outside shots
of the deck and gardens, and zoomed photos of the garden shed.

That is my list of subjects, but also high on my wish list
is to take photos that are S U P E R  S H A R P with bright white lighting.
No more darkblurryyellow-y, g.r.a.i.n.y photos for me!
A new camera does guarantee all this...  right? 

If you are ready to find a camera right for you,
then begin with analyzing how you will use the camera.

Make your notes,
and come back for the next post,

✯ 2... Read about cameras from a variety of sources,

 in your search for a camera right for you.



Are you considering buying a DSLR?
Will it be your first or is it an upgrade for an existing DSLR?

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Please join me at these inspiring sites...

SUNDAY
Dishing It and Digging It @ Rustic and Refined

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Easy Christmas Decor

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Christmas is just days away.  Less than a week away, there is still time to do some easy Christmas decorating.  With just a few changes, including using some of your existing decor, you can quickly take a room from its ordinary everyday look to a room that celebrates the season.





Greenery in Special Pots 


The easiest way to add a little Christmas to the house is to add a plant, fresh flowers, or even a dried botanical. Botanicals do not have to be the usual traditional Christmas flowers of poinsettias, paperwhites, or amaryllises. The plants and flowers shown can be found at a grocery store, and the two round botanicals can be found at a craft store.



Choosing a special container adds a seasonal touch.  Compare how the lemon cypress tree in the small black plastic pot looks with how the same size lemon cypress looks in the French design gray vase with its floral garland. The floral swag on the vase is a traditional Christmas look and dresses up the lemon cypress tree.

The little green ceramic pot holds a gold painted botanical wooden ball nestled in a bed of moss. Fill the bottom of the pot with shredded paper so that only a little moss is needed at the top of the pot to hold the round wooden ball.



Adding a little bit of gold, such as the small crown, also dresses up a little green ceramic pot and gives an unexpected special look to a group of plants and botanicals. 



A gold filigree-edged wired ribbon takes a small rustic pot from an everyday look to a holiday look. Adding a wooden tag with a Christmas greeting adds even more holiday cheer to an existing potted plant/botanical. 


Moss Filled Crown


You may not have a crown like this one, but you probably have an unusual bowl, basket, tray, or box that you can fill with moss and create a similar look that fits your decorating style. Since I love French Country, I use pieces with a French look like the fleur de lis that tops the gray metal crown. If you love American Country, you could use a vintage or rustic box as your container. 



Fill the bottom of the container with "mood moss", a type of moss that is mounded, not flat sheets. Add a single small faux plant like the snowdrop.  Finish by adding a small figure such as the concrete bird whose gray color goes well with the gray crown. A small reclining deer would be a good Christmas figure to use instead of a bird.



I like the snowdrop because it is white, but another possible small faux plant to use is a grape hyacinth, also called a muscari. Both snowdrops and grape hyacinths bloom in the midst of winter which means the little moss container would look good all the way into spring. 


Pine Cone Filled Urn


 Another container that has a French Country design is a pedestal urn. Nothing is easier to use to fill a container than pine cones.  Oversized Sugar pine cones are perfect for large containers.  There are only four pine cones in this large urn.  The dried vines shaped in a loose wild circle provide a transition from the urn to the pine cones.



The pine cones in the white urn go well with the French bergère chair that has fruitwood finished carved curvy legs and white and beige striped linen upholstery. The best part is no watering needed. 


Gold Birds and Boxwood Balls 


Do you see repeating themes in my decor?  I love birds, and I love boxwood. Oh, and I love bleu.



Another easy and fast Christmas decoration is a shallow white bowl filled with small preserved boxwood balls, gold painted hand-carved wooden birds, and a single faux gold bead and leaves spray. It's another arrangement that does not require watering.




Begin with placing three preserved boxwood balls in a shallow bowl.  Place one floral spray with the boxwood balls, and pull the beaded stems outward so they rise above the boxwood in several directions.



Finish by placing two to three gold birds atop and around the boxwood.  This arrangement took the most time because the birds had to be spray painted gold using Rust-Oleum's metallic gold spray paint.


Sparkly Reins on Wooden Horse 


Adding a wreath to an existing wooden carved horse is just one way to dress up the horse.  Another fast, easy way to dress the horse for the holidays is to tie a large braided cord with metallic threads as a rein around the horse's neck.   



While red and green are traditional Christmas colors, choose to use a braid in a color that coordinates with your existing color scheme.  The pale mauve braided cord coordinates with the curtains in the living room.  A large satin or wired ribbon could also serve as a holiday rein for a wooden horse. 


Decorated Magazine Box 


This is a super fast and super easy way to add Christmas decor to an existing item.  First, tie a Christmas gift tag like this birch tree tag to the handle of the magazine box.



Next, add a sparkly gold beaded spray to one end of the magazine box near the gift tag.  Bend two or three of the leaves or twigs over the edge of the box to stabilize the spray, and place the spray inside the box. 



Finally, add December issues of your favorite magazines so they are visible with other months' issues behind the December ones. Seasonal catalogs also have beautiful Christmas covers that are fun to display in a magazine box.  Plus, the box keeps the catalogs handy for making wish lists. 


With just a few easy decorations, the living room is almost ready for Christmas leaving lots of time for shopping, watching Christmas movies, listening to Christmas carols, baking Christmas cookies, and spending time with family and friends. 



Here is a peek at how the living room looks with three of the easy Christmas decor arrangements. 

There are a few more decorations to add to the living room, including dressing the fireplace mantel with boxwood wreaths. Stop by in a couple of days to see the entire living room decorated for Christmas.  

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Please join me at these inspiring sites...

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Tips For Easy Christmas Swags

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Christmas is still a few weeks away, but here is a 
CHRISTMAS 
beautiful idea... 

Looking for a quick, easy way to add Christmas to a small spot?  Like beneath a small wall lamp, on an interior door, or on a narrow wall?  Christmas swags are easy to make and will add some seasonal color to all of these areas.

Christmas Swags 


Only three things are needed to make this traditional red and green swag hanging beneath a small wall lamp.  
  1. faux greenery branch with pine cones 
  2. artificial holly twigs 
  3. wire-edge red and green ribbon 
Instead of gluing parts of the swag together, use a small piece of the same ribbon in the bow to tie the artificial greenery and holly twigs together. Then continue to wrap the ribbon around the ends of the branches to give the swag a more finished look.  Tie a large bow around the swag to hide the ribbon-wrapped ends.  By using ribbon instead of glue to hold all the pieces together, the swag can easily be disassembled for its pieces to be used in other arrangements. 

Work with the greenery and holly twigs to pull them so that bits and pieces stick out at various depths to give a three-dimensional look.  Do the same with the ribbon bow.  Pull the bow loops forward and position the bow ends so that some of the ribbon is tucked into the greenery. 



The artificial greenery in this swag is the same greenery used in the first swag.  Replace the red and green ribbon with a creamy white satin ribbon.  A decorative ornament hanger (see the gold six-sided star just below the ribbon's knot) hung through the creamy ribbon knot provides a hanger so several items can easily be added to the swag. 

Choose similar color items of various sizes and with their own individual hanging cords of varying lengths.  Add the largest item (white pierced metal heart) first and use the longest hanging cord with it so this item hangs the lowest on the swag. 

Add a small item (gold glittery snowflake) next so that it hangs shorter than the largest item. 

Add a medium sized item (silver mercury glass heart) next so it hangs at the top of the largest item. 

Finally, add a Christmas word (Noël) so it hangs horizontally below the highest object.

Part of the beauty of this swag is in the layering of thin, flat objects with three-dimensional ones. Pull out your Christmas ornaments to find three to four to use in place of the sample items shown. 



One of the nice things about making your own decorations is getting to use colors that coordinate with your home's existing color scheme. 

To create a similar look as above, use one leaf branch with gold berries that is the same length as the artificial greenery.  Tie the two artificial stems together with your coordinating ribbon as before.  A gold edge on the wired ribbon coordinates with the gold in the leaves. 

Hang one color-coordinated Christmas ornament by tying its hanging cord into the ribbon's knot, then make the bow loops.  Use your fingers to curl large loose loops in the ribbon's ends so that they twirl on either side of the ornament.  



A large horizontal ornament looks better than a vertical ornament.  Shop for ribbons with sheen because they work well with glittery looks like the reindeer's look. 



An inexpensive ready-made small swag can be embellished to add your own colors.  A blue wire-edge ribbon is tied simply, without a bow, around the original swag that includes a very small green branch, one pinecone, two rustic bells, two sprigs of berry clusters, and another small cluster of artificial greenery.  

By itself, the little swag is nice, but by adding the blue ribbon and one mercury blue pear with silver metal leaf, the arrangement now fits with the existing color scheme in my home.  




Adding a small green glass bird with a long feathery tail makes the small swag look larger.  Hang the small swag from a hook on a door like this entry closet door.  Then hang the small green glass bird so it is above the swag. 




Technically the metal bucket with a toile scene is not called a swag, but can be used in the same small places as swags to add seasonal greenery.  While the colors and design are not very Christmasy, the arrangement takes on a seasonal look from the star-shaped coordinating ornament, a snippet of color-coordinating ribbon, and small twigs of wild live yaupon holly. 

Adding just a little live greenery gives year-round objects like the little French toile bucket a festive holiday touch. No need to replace existing items.  Just add ribbons and live greens for a little French Country Christmas in a flash. 



All of these small arrangements are easy and FAST.  Plus, they can be moved from one place to another even faster.  By re-using basic materials, each year new looks can be made by changing ribbons and ornaments.  Nothing better for holiday decorating. 

See the following posts that show how the Christmas swags 
looked with other Christmas decorations. 

Can you believe that in only a few days we will be celebrating Thanksgiving, and 
then it will be time to begin decorating for Christmas? 

Mark your calendars for Christmas inspiration from all over Texas 
when over 20 Texas bloggers share a window into Christmas in Texas

Stacey at Poofing the Pillows
is hosting
December 7-11, 2015

I was thrilled when Stacey invited me to be part of this 
first-ever Christmas blog hop of over 20 Texas bloggers, and 
am honored to be on the first day line-up on 
Monday, December 7, 2015. 

Several of the bloggers have shared their plans with all of us, 
and this is going to be a great Christmas blog hop! 
You don't want to miss any of the posts 
that include decorations, crafts, recipes, and even a fashionista. 

Watch for more details in the days to come.