If you're wondering whether your dining room is designer-approved, you'll want to keep reading. The pros often notice a variety of mistakes in this room of the home, pertaining to lighting choices, furniture size, and much more.
15.01.2024 - 12:49 / balconygardenweb.com / Raul Cornelius
If you want your houseplants to look big and lush, pruning and regrowing them in the same pot is a smart idea! Plants like Pothos, Spider Plant, Philodendron, Snake Plant, ZZ Plant, English Ivy, Wandering Dude, Sedum, Herbs, String of Pearls, and String of Bananas can be easily grown from cuttings. Just cut a healthy stem or take baby plants, remove lower leaves, and plant them in the same pot as the parent plant for a fuller look. That's it.
Pruning keeps the plant looking handsome and neat and gives you an opportunity to propagate new plants from the cuttings! Incorporating them in the parent plant’s pot is a creative way to enhance the fullness of the specimen, making it look lush and bigger – helping you maximize the plant’s impact in a limited space!
With its cascading vines, pothos is a stunning addition to high shelves or hanging baskets. Take 4-5 cuttings of about 5-6 inches each from the main plant and then plant them in the same pot. In a few weeks, you will have a bushy and lush specimen!
Its arching leaves and baby plantlets bring a lively touch to any space. It’s ideal for hanging baskets in well-lit corners or on tall plant stands, where its offshoots can gracefully hang down.
Do note that this plant doesn’t grow from the ‘pruning‘ as you will have to propagate it using the pups it grows.
They are versatile and look striking on a small table, in a corner of your living room, or on a plant stand where their leaves can gently spill over the edges.
This popular houseplant offers a modern and architectural look with its upright, sword-like leaves. It’s perfect for placing in corners, against bare walls, or hallways.
With its waxy, dark green leaves, the ZZ Plant symbolizes resilience and elegance. It thrives on
If you're wondering whether your dining room is designer-approved, you'll want to keep reading. The pros often notice a variety of mistakes in this room of the home, pertaining to lighting choices, furniture size, and much more.
AS SHE OFTEN DOES, naturalist and nature writer Nancy Lawson—perhaps known better to some of you as the Humane Gardener after the title of her first book—caught my attention the other day.
OsakaWayne Studios / Getty Images
In 2024, design is taking a turn away from pastels and towards the boldness of jewel tones.
Since 2015 she’s run the NT’s Heritage Horticultural Program, delivering practical workshops to hundreds of garden staff members. Here, she explains how to handle your hellebores so that you can enjoy a quality display of flowers for years to come.
If you want cool plants for your home, try these unique trailing ones! Like Trailing Begonia with pretty leaves, Trailing Jade for hanging pots, Trailing Rosemary for fragrant greenery, and Trailing Peperomia with nice patterns. Also, check out Trailing African Violet, Trailing Ferns, Trailing Spider Plant, and Trailing Calathea. Read more about each one below.
These days, it's certainly acceptable to think beyond the traditional all-white kitchen, but you should be mindful when making your color selection.
In his classic book Mormon Country, author Wallace Stegner noted that nineteenth century Mormons planted rows of Lombardy poplar trees wherever they established settlements in the territory that is now Utah. The trees served as windbreaks and boundary markers, but they were also the flags that marked the advance of Mormon civilization in a hostile territory. In my hometown and lots of other towns all over the United States elm trees served a similar function, marking the spread of middle class residential neighborhoods during the end of the nineteenth and the first third of the twentieth centuries. In the 1960’s almost all of those tall elegant trees fell prey to Dutch Elm Disease, making each municipality a little poorer.
Unleash your inner green thumb and add a touch of elegance to your home with these stunning Plant Collection on the Shelves Pictures. Discover how to creatively incorporate plants into your decor and breathe new life into any room. Get ready to be inspired!
Some people get their kicks from designer labels, others from rummaging through flea shops, or collecting obscure Japanese comics, vintage tractors, handbags, dolls, beer-mats, Star Wars merchandise or whatever else. Me, I get mine from ordering seeds.
Yes I know it’s unusual for me to blog mid week, but there is a lot to do in the greenhouses and out in the garden.
About 10 days ago I had another 5 bags of top soil arrive. This is usually an annual thing, I like to get it in before the end of the financial year as it’s an expense for work. The soil in the raised beds always drops slightly during the year, it’s just something that it does, but eventually I won’t need to get any more. Each bag weighs about a ton, so that’s a lot of soil for one person to move on their own. George is at university so got away with it this year, but with Mark and I shovelling into the barrow, Emily wheeling the barrow and then with the help of Kai tipping the soil into the bed and then Kai raking it about we were working like a very well oiled machine. We got the first 2 bags done within about half an hour, and then sat down for a little light refreshment, and then did the last 3 bags. We started at 10.30am and were finished by just gone noon. I didn’t think that we’d get them all done by lunchtime, I was hoping to get about 3 done, so that was brilliant. Well done team Woodside Barn!!