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

French-Inspired White Bird Cage for Spring

Friday, March 20, 2020

A French-inspired white wire bird cage has landed on the white shelves in the kitchen sunspace for a fresh look this spring. Previously, the white bird cage sat on a table at the end of the sofa in the living room. 


French inspired white bird cage for spring decorating in a country house sunspace
Why this bird cage and the two myrtle topiaries? 
  
As always, I look for ways to bring more French design into my country house. If you also love adding French Country style or garden style to your house, read on to see how a bird cage and topiaries could bring a fresh look to your house this spring. 

Winter Living Room Greenery

Friday, January 4, 2019


Winter months can be bleak, but adding live greenery to your living room can keep the inside of your home from looking cold and dreary. 


Winter living room greenery to brighten homes after Christmas
Add living plants to white flower pots and crocks for a crisp look that goes with any color scheme all winter long. 

New French Garden Urns

Monday, May 21, 2018


How do you get a French look in your garden? 

One way that guarantees to take your garden from a beautiful collection of plants without a defined style to a French-inspired style is to use plants like those grown in France ... 

... and to plant them in garden urns with classic French design. 



New French Garden Urns in 2 sizes and 2 shapes on the potting bench
Two-balled topiaries, single-ball ivy topiaries, triple-ball myrtle topiaries, and cone-shaped rosemary topiaries have not been too difficult to find for both my inside and outside gardens, but affordable French garden urns are another story. 

French Design on Friday 20

Friday, June 9, 2017

~ Garden ~
Olive Tree Topiary 


French design is instinctive in France, a natural reflection of one's heritage and surroundings. Accepting trendy French Country from non-French designers may or may not provide the look inherit to French homes. For Francophiles who admire French design, we have to study French design for its details if we want authentic French style in our homes. 

How to know if something is French in design can be found by studying photographs taken in France. Truly a picture is worth a thousand words and can offer real insight in French Country, both design and way of life. 

Take a look at how Parisians use olive tree topiaries in their city gardens for ideas on how to create a French-inspired garden in your home. 




garden-olive-tree-topiaries-in-french-design
Gardening in a big city like Paris can be challenging, but containers offer a solution for adding a touch of nature and green to city sidewalks, courtyards, and balconies. Key ingredients in Paris gardening are using hardy plants that 1] withstand harsh city environments of end-to-end paved surfaces and 2] thrive as a container plant.  

French Design on Friday 9

Friday, March 10, 2017

~ Garden ~ 
Topiaries - Part 2 


Topiaries are all over France, not just in Paris, and come in all shapes and sizes making them one of the most common of all French designs used in gardening. 

Whether you have a city garden or a country garden, topiaries add French style. With Spring less than two weeks away, now is the time to consider adding topiaries to your landscape... to your garden, your deck, your patio, or your driveway. 

Take a look at photos of topiaries in Sarlat, France for inspiration in designing your own gardens. 

french-style-topiary-tree-sarlat-france
Sarlat, France is one of hundreds of beautiful French towns that survived modernization over the centuries. And is one of my favorite French towns that I visit over and over again. Its creamy-colored old stone buildings line narrow streets designed for horses, carts, carriages, and people. Part of its charm comes from manicured trees trimmed into topiaries along the streets. 

French Design on Friday 8

Friday, March 3, 2017

~ Garden

Spring is a time to dream of new gardens, new plants, and new design layouts. A perfect time to create a design of your dreams. Do you dream about creating a French style to your home and garden? 



ball-topiary-plants-are-classic-french-garden-design
French design can be created with just two plants. Yes, it only takes two plants to give a French style to your home. Two plants give instant French design with no long-term garden plan revisions needed. 

Wild Honeysuckle Vine Topiary

Monday, July 11, 2016

French design and inspiration pops up in the most unusual spots. Driving along the country road to my brother's house in farmland Alabama, I spotted a wild honeysuckle vine topiary trained around a fence post. 


Ivy Topiary Love

Friday, February 26, 2016

Between the Spring flowers and Christmas decorations there is a period 
when the house seems empty, missing something. 


While putting away the holiday decorations does give the house 
a lighter feeling with the kitchen counters bare, 
there is a longing for something green and fresh...  
in the quiet dead days of winter. 


A longing that is filled with a fresh green ivy ball topiary... 
IVY  TOPIARY  LOVE 
❧ 

Topiaries have a way of providing just the right amount of needed greenery 
with a flair that says, "I can stand alone, nothing else needed." 
Of course, a beautiful pot in which to stand regally does add to the ivy. 


Yes, ivy topiary love for a bare winter kitchen adds life to the house.  

And gives promises for coming Spring 
filled with trees, shrubs, grass, and flowers 
budding with new life.


Callie loves plants of all kinds, not just ivy topiaries. 
Looking for a way to add some freshness to your home this winter? 
Try a little topiary love. 

Then when the weather warms, move the topiary to your outside deck. 

See more ways for topiary love at my house. 




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Dishing It and Digging It @ Rustic and Refined

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Tips on French Style Topiaries

Sunday, May 10, 2015


You know the French are masters with sculpted gardens and plants, 
and topiaries appear throughout their personal gardens, 
in village parks, and along side their highways. 
Most anyone can identify a lonely stretch of a narrow straight highway 
flanked on either side with sculpted trees as a French roadway. 
There is usually a man on a bicycle carrying baguettes 
which probably helps identify the road as being in France.  

One of the easiest and fastest ways for me to add some French style
to my house is to add one or more fresh live topiaries. 
Buy it, bring it home, set in a pretty pot, and water. 
No sewing, no crafting, and not much money. 
Pretty much a somewhat laissez-faire approach to decorating. 
Another French way of doing things. 
Make it look easy even though there really is some effort required.

I've included a summary of

10 Tips for Growing a Topiary 

that will help growing topiaries much easier. 


White Paint & French Details in the Master Bath

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Looking around the house,
looking with a new perspective,
I am re-evaluating the overall look of the house.
 Comparing my existing artwork, decorative items,
linens, plants, planters, drawer pulls, and light fixtures
with French looking items gives me ideas of how
I want to change the details in my house so
the house has a decided French feel.

A French-Inspired Garden and Home
is the look I love and want to recreate in my own home.

As changes were made to the master bathroom this summer,
I looked for ways to give it an even more French feel. 


At the end of spring, way back in early May, 
I decided the master bathroom needed some changes. 
What began with making the vanity drawer space more usable 
kept expanding to more and more changes. 



You know how that goes... one thing leads to many others. 


Lavender Touches - Bath Decor
The two large drawers on each end of the master vanity no longer 
seemed like a good idea as I struggled to open them and then struggled 
to find what I was looking for inside the large top drawers. 
We re-used the original drawer fronts and cut them into 
the two smaller drawer fronts. 

Compare the photos.... 
The first photo is how the vanity looks now in September after changes, 
the second photo is during the transition this summer, and 
the third photo is how the vanity looked in May before any changes. 



A small-sized drawer and a medium-sized drawer now 
take the place of the former large top drawer on each end of the vanity. 
Best of all, all of the drawers have new glides that make them so much easier to open. 



The most noticeable change is the new white paint. 
The wooden ceiling with exposed beams makes the room darker 
than a room with a painted sheetrock ceiling. 



The white painted cabinets help make the room brighter 
and reflect the light from both the light fixtures and the sunlight 
streaming in through the shuttered window. 
The hardest part to paint was the toe space at the bottom  
because of the weird angle I had to hold my arm. 
It became much easier to paint after I put down painter's tape on the floor tile. 



New white painted wrought iron drawer pulls add a French look 
because they have a raised curved botanical pattern that has 
a fleur-de-lis look. 
Not only do all of the drawers have drawer pulls, 
but a pull was also added to the center fixed raised panel below the sink. 

The drawer pulls are from Hobby Lobby and were bought during one 
of the periodic half-price sales on drawer pulls. 
Rust-Oleum Heirloom White spray paint made painting the pulls so easy. 



I think the vanity looks more like French furniture now. 
What do you think? 



Once the structural changes were made to the vanity to give it 
a French design and better usability, I then focused on accessories. 

I love French lavender plants, but they need to grow outside. 
When it came time to replace the lavender plant that was on the vanity, 
I found a live double topiary at Walmart. 
One of the main distinctions between French and English gardens 
is the French create sculpted, manicured lawns, trees, and flower gardens, 
whereas the English create free-form, blowsy landscapes. 



After transplanting the topiary from the small plastic pot to 
a larger French-styled Guy Wolff clay pot, I kept the plant outside 
on the deck in the shade to help it become more established. 
From time to time, I clipped new shoots to maintain the original shape. 



So, what to do with the white oval planter that formerly held the lavender? 
Use it as hand towel and bath cloth holder! 


The perfect size and shape to keep towels and bath cloths handy near the sink. 



Two French fragrances sit beside the sink. 
Williams-Sonoma French Lavender hand soap, half price at their outlet stores, 
releases a light lavender fragrance each time I wash my hands. 
Close your eyes, and you are walking through a lavender field in Provence.

Lancôme's Ô de l'Orangerie spray eau de toilette has a light citrus-y scent. 
Close your eyes, and you are walking in a "serene French garden." 



The new smaller drawers are just the right size to hold more French Lancôme 
and other toiletries that previously sat on a tray atop the vanity. 



French chateaux in the Loire Valley are among my favorite places 
to visit whenever I am in France. 

Framed prints of Chambord and Chenonceau Chateaux 
hang beneath a small clay fleur-de-lis with a small ivory 
ribbon visually connecting the fleur-de-lis and the two prints. 



One of the most economical souvenirs of French chateaux is 
small colored prints sold at the gift shops on the grounds of each chateau. 



Plus, small cards are easy to pack in a suitcase and do not weigh much at all. 
Two real factors in souvenir shopping are bulk and weight and become 
more and more important the longer you are in France. 
Heavy suitcases do not make for a fun trip! 

Once home, you can frame the prints using pre-made inexpensive frames like 
these beautiful blue and gold carved frames from Michaels. 



A close-up photo of the Chenonceau print shows the beautiful details and 
colors in this inexpensive print of my favorite French chateau. 
For several years these two prints hung over a desk in a guest room, 
but are now perfect hanging at the end of the master vanity. 



Remember... one thing leads to another? 
A quick trip through HomeGoods this summer, and 
I found this white textured washable cotton rug 
that is the perfect size in front of the vanity. 
I wasn't looking for a rug, 
but could not pass up this great find. 
The white rug is another way to lighten the room. 



I love the massive wooden beams that are the structure of the house 
and do not plan to change their color, but I sure do like how the white painted 
vanity and new white rug help brighten the bathroom. 

In case you are wondering, the cracks in the beams are not a structural problem. 
Our house was built from new northern pine, and the sawmill architects 
assured us that it is normal for the wood to crack as it shrinks, 
for up to seven years! 
For those first seven years it was not unusual to be awakened 
in the middle of night from a loud CRACKing sound. 
For the past twenty years, no more loud cracking, 
just contracting and expanding a little all during the year 
depending upon temperature and humidity. 



Now I'm looking at the medium blue painted bead board and thinking, 
"A light blue like the walls would be nice." 

One thing always leads to another. 

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Blog Elevated Conference 
&
Round Top Antiques Fair

Fun times just around the corner... 
If you are going to either one, 
let me know, so we can say, "Hi," and 
maybe have a Coke and piece of pie together. 

Please join me at these inspiring sites...
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French Garden Shed Elements

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

What makes a garden shed a 
French style 
garden shed? 
Especially since it is not in France? 



French design elements... 
How do you achieve them? 

Step back, look at the overall design. 


The hip roofline is the strongest French design element. 



The pitch and symmetry of the roof 
are classical elements in a French roof. 

Another strong element that creates a French look 
is the symmetry in the building, not just the roof. 
The building is a square. 
The doors are centered. 
The deck step is centered. 



French doors are the next strongest 
French design in the garden shed. 

While the roof, doors, and overall shape 
establish the French design, 
details 
create even more French flair.

Levered door handles, 
instead of round doorknobs 
so usual in American buildings, 
add an authentic French touch. 



The deck step is eyebrow shaped, not a half-round, 
which adds to the French look. 
Eyebrow shaped windows are used much 
more often than half-round windows in 
vintage buildings in France. 

Variegated blue roof shingles, the pale blue walls, and 
the French bleu door on the deck 
are classical French colors. 
French bleu... well known as a color... 
is closer to red than to green on the color wheel. 



French gardens are much more structured and symmetrical than English gardens.  

The large pot with a French scroll design 
contains a dwarf yaupon being trained into a 
ball shape. 

Two triple-ball topiaries in matching clay pots 
standing on either side of the French doors  
are strong French garden design elements, 
both in shape and symmetrical position.  

For a look at more French-inspired topiaries,
see French Country Style Deck.


In the garden is an old wooden and scrolled-iron park bench, 
truly reminiscent of Parisian parks. 

Another matching Vintage Park Bench sits in
the shade of a pear tree in the back yard.



One more look at the French garden shed 
seen in the background of 
an "obedient plant" 
growing in a pot on the house deck. 

See Botanic Bleu Beginnings to read about 
how the French garden shed began. 
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