Email this page to a friend


Send me a free trial issue and a free gift
Old House Journal

Subscribe

Give a Gift Renew
Customer Service



The Art of Embellishment: Decor for an Arts & Crafts Garden
You've spent hours digging in the soil to get the garden of your Arts & Crafts house to look just right. Now check out our picks for finishing it off in period style.

By Clare Martin


Photo courtesy of Hestercombe

If there's one overarching goal that all gardens of the Arts & Crafts movement sought, it was to blend in. Proponents of Arts & Crafts garden design wanted their landscapes to connect not only with the homes they were attached to, but also with their natural surroundings. The use of native plants and wildflowers, along with uncomplicated layouts, helped achieve this ideal.

Ornamentation also had its place in the Arts & Crafts garden, albeit in very subtle form. When looking for products to embellish your own garden, simplicity should be the name of the game. Forget ornate iron benches, elaborate trellises, and fancy ornamental planters. In the Arts & Crafts garden, as in the homes from the era, clean lines and unfussy patterns reign supreme.

While there are a few faithful reproductions out there (Henry Hall Designs, for example, makes a teak bench that's an exact replica of one from a garden designed by Gertrude Jekyll), as well as a few inspired homages (Jekyll gets her due again in a simple terracotta planter by potter Guy Wolff), the majority of decor for Arts & Crafts gardens will defy categorization. Photos of period gardens are a helpful resource (a curved bench, for example, calls to mind the distinctive serpentine one that graces the garden at Dumbarton Oaks), as are decorative objects of the era that feature garden motifs (a hexagonal birdhouse mimics one featured on a C.F.A. Voysey wallpaper sample, while a baluster birdbath echoes a fountain depicted on a Grueby tile). Help your ornamentation blend in with the natural environment by selecting items that have an aged appearance, or will easily gain one (such as antique cobblestones or a bronze planter that will develop a worn patina after a few weather cycles). When it comes to larger items like pergolas, gazebos, and gates, look for simple but eye-catching designs, and always choose sizes that are appropriate to the scale of your house.

Check out our photo gallery below to get your search started, but remember that the best choices for your Arts & Crafts garden will be ones that forge a connection to your home and its surroundings. After all, blending in is what it's all about.

Leagrave Bench from Henry Hall Designs
Leagrave Bench from Henry Hall Designs, (800) 767-7738; www.henryhalldesigns.com

Gertrude Pot from the Guy Wolff Collection at Seibert & Rice
Gertrude Pot from the Guy Wolff Collection at Seibert & Rice, (973) 467-8266; www.seibert-rice.com

Reflection Bench from Gardener's Supply Company
Reflection Bench from Gardener's Supply Company, (888) 833-1412; www.gardeners.com

Hexagon Birdhouse from Frontgate
Hexagon Birdhouse from Frontgate, (888) 263-9850; www.frontgate.com

Arcadian Birdbath from Haddonstone
Arcadian Birdbath from Haddonstone, (856) 931-7011; www.haddonstone.com

Old Cincinnati Mosiac Cobblestone from Historical Bricks
Old Cincinnati Mosiac Cobblestone from Historical Bricks, 319-354-5251; www.historicalbricks.com

Gratia Orb Planter in bronze from Design Within Reach
Gratia Orb Planter in bronze from Design Within Reach, (800) 944-2233; www.dwr.com

Cedar gazebo from Vixen Hill
Cedar gazebo from Vixen Hill, (800) 423-2766; www.vixenhill.com

Bedford Pergola from Trellis Structures
Bedford Pergola from Trellis Structures, (800) 649-6920; www.trellisstructures.com

Basking Ridge Gate from Walpole Woodworkers
Basking Ridge Gate from Walpole Woodworkers, (800) 343-6948; www.walpolewoodworkers.com











Get your FREE Trial Issue of Old House Journal and a FREE gift.
Yes! Please send me a FREE trial issue of Old House Journal and a FREE gift.
If I like it and decide to continue, I'll get 5 more issues (6 in all) for just $21.97. If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write cancel on the invoice and owe nothing. The Free Trial Issue is mine to keep, no matter what.
Full Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email (req):
Offer valid in US only.
Click here for Canadian/Foreign subscriptions.



 
 

Home Buyer Publications/Active Interest Media, is the publisher of Old House Journal, New Old Houses Magazine,
the Restoration Directory and Traditional Products.
Copyright 2008. Home Buyer Publications/Active Interest Media
4125 Lafayette Center Drive, Suite 100 Chantilly, VA 20151. All Rights Reserved.


From Old House Journal MagazineOld House Products Old House Journal Info from Old House Journal Advertisers Historic Preservation Guidelines Preservation Guides Historic House Plans Old House Forums Swaps and SalesSwaps and Sales Old House Restoration Directory