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Focus on Flowers
2005: Gertrude Jekyll
January, when gardeners in cold climates are forced to remain indoors,
is a month to enjoy reading books about flowers. Most books about
gardening include references to Gertrude Jekyll. She was an expert
on herbaceous borders. Her training as a painter shaped her skill
in combining colors and shapes and she was also good at placing
plants to beautify awkward locations. She was born in London in
1843 and when she died in 1932, she had consulted on the design
of about 350 gardens. She showed how to use old fashioned and native
perennial plants and how effectively these could be combined. She
advocated that all areas of a garden should be unified, the shapes
of the plantings must harmonize with the architecture of the home
and other garden elements: unity was a Jekyll principle. She paid
careful attention to every detail -- her long borders flowed from
massed flowers of cool colors to waves of warm and then hot colors.
She believed three plants together were always preferable to only
one, and she used silvery gray foliage to soften the overall effect
of her sumptuous flower beds. Miss Jekyll, as she was affectionately
called by everyone, was a prolific garden writer, and she has influenced
flower gardeners for generations, on both sides of the Atlantic.
This is Moya Andrews and today we focused on Gertrude Jekyll.
WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated:
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
Copyright 2005, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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