Saturday, June 20, 2009

Flamework sculpture plants







beetography
goldenseal-DSC_1661.jpg

goldenseal-DSC_1661.jpg


Robert Nyman
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beetography
dahlia4-DSC_9355.jpg

dahlia4-DSC_9355.jpg


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1600x1200px background image Happy Fathers Day with yellow roses.
In album Fathers Day

atheana
DCF 1.0

DCF 1.0



Beautiful yellow rose with hearts of love. Free greeting card.
In album Roses

Beautiful roses in hot pink, baby pink, yellow and red - free e-Card. Use any of the roses or flowers in this entire gallery as free e-Cards.
In album Roses

atheana

atheana's photo


It's press day at the show and the designers have put final touches to their gardens, and are awaiting the verdict of the judges. I've picked out some exhibitors and designers that I think are going to do rather well.

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Cascading Blue (UPDATED 06/10/09)

Flower-1.jpg
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flower.jpg
Flower - flower.jpg





Flower That Have a Circle Purple...



Daisies  (UPDATED 06/10/09)

atheana

atheana's photo


Asim Shah posted a photo:

bee




Flower

Robert Nyman
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Like, flowers


Normally the BBC televises the Chelsea sell-off to the sound of 'Flight of the Bumblebee.' Seeing the crowds circling the stands in the Great Pavilion an hour before the bell was rung, I wondered whether the theme tune to 'Jaws' might not be more fitting. This was my first Chelsea sell-off. In some cases things seemed quite civilised: Jekka's herb farm looked relaxed, her herbs had cloakroom tickets n eatly stapled to them which were attached to them each time someone reserved a plant. At the other end of the spectrum a crowd of customers waiting at the Winchester Growers/ National Collection of Dahlias stand were loitering in a predatory manner. A somewhat flustered Jon Wheatley called out to the crowd that the dahlias were not to be trampled on and that they could only be sold from the front first. Luckily Britain is a nation of well-behaved people who like to queue so the scrum did not result in casualties.

Modern show gardens may be the order of the day but we are still a traditional bunch when it comes to our back gardens - the most mobbed stands were roses and clematis followed by lavender and orchids. As the pavilion became more crowded, more and more plant material went on the move. Sometimes the plant material came first before you knew who was behind it - a huge Ficus benjamina rammed into a couple of enormous double-flowered clematis. At other times the tall spires of plant material could be observed proceeding from afar like Roman standard bearers. One woman I saw chose to drape her long Clematis 'Vienetta' elegantly over her shoulders, giving her an air of Botticelli's 'Primavera.'

But it wasn't all gaiety. There's an emotional side to ending the show for many of the designers. Adam Frost who designed the QVC garden couldn't stand to see his garden broken up and left an hour before the bell was rung. "I can't bear to see it taken apart and the sell off just upsets me", he says. Conceptual designer Tony Smith was taking a last look at his Quilted Velvet garden. "Things in the pavilion often wilt after a few days, but our gardens get better as the days go by," he says. "It's difficult for me to see it torn up". All gardens are ephemeral, none more so than these. The pictures and recordings may live on, but the feel of walking around in them lives on only in our collective memories.

So, was I tempted at the sell off? I queued up the Grenada stand and was delighted by the bags of spices on offer for £1. Turmeric, nutmeg (still in its shell), cinnamon. The smell of Chelsea will be in my thoughts for some time to come.


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