tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post1841868573181496090..comments2024-02-14T08:39:30.077+00:00Comments on the linen garden: gathering and listeningUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post-26942375567325122512020-10-03T21:49:56.775+01:002020-10-03T21:49:56.775+01:00Hi! I realize this is a very old post, so don'...Hi! I realize this is a very old post, so don't neccessarily expect a responce! I love your blog and instagram, as I love the old English, romantic style and of course lots of textiles! One of the photos in this post shows a print of a woman bending over in a mountain meadow to pick flowers. This is exactly what I've been looking for, but wonder if you have the artist's name, or any other info that I could search for? Thanks if you do!Jolenehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11129017092245557384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post-54744427332331412362015-07-12T11:21:51.127+01:002015-07-12T11:21:51.127+01:00your garden sounds just like mine....I haven't...your garden sounds just like mine....I haven't grown sweet peas this year and I am missing having them around so much. My aliums have now been picked due to 'kids and balls' - they may have been rescued a little too early though ;) xxxxxx vicky trainorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16950055491549549876noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post-57572279407537698722015-06-29T11:04:25.246+01:002015-06-29T11:04:25.246+01:00Our foxgloves have grown in all the paving cracks ...Our foxgloves have grown in all the paving cracks this year, not in the borders where I assiduously sprinkled all their seeds! Enjoying my first few sweet peas at the moment - the smell is divine. And plucking up the courage to cut the allium seedheads, now the flowers have mostly gone over. I love their sculptural forms and the way they change from green to beige as they dry.modflowershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08272448265749188953noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post-55620670665529908552015-06-29T06:39:38.537+01:002015-06-29T06:39:38.537+01:00My garden loves foxgloves. It used to be a woodla...My garden loves foxgloves. It used to be a woodland so they thrive - and re-seed and naturally move around the garden every year....like a slow dance. Enjoy a little snippet of the garden indoors....... and I so need a new shed....ours is home to insects rather than 'stuff'... xxxxxxxxxx<br />vicky trainorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16950055491549549876noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-526794755835033943.post-66687287695637702592015-06-27T20:23:32.288+01:002015-06-27T20:23:32.288+01:00Our house is filled with foxgloves this week. We ...Our house is filled with foxgloves this week. We had a great crop; dark pink, pale pink, white and one in an apricot/pink. They had sprung up in the wrong place, beside the shed and smothering the strawberries, but earlier in the year I couldn't bear to pull them out. Then we suddenly had enough money for something I have needed for years but couldn't afford and it needs a shed. Our shed was too small; we need one twice as big. So the foxgloves, strawberries, aquilegia and other stuff I don't know the name of have had to come out, some into pots to go back later. So rather than waste all the flowers, they have been appreciated indoors. I'm not happy to dig them up but ah well....Attilahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15916442932314835859noreply@blogger.com