Tagged With: moyra goff
The Very Best Gardens of the Cotswolds & Nearby Regions
In a normal summer, during non-pandemic-times, I’d be rattling around in England and in Italy, continuing my explorations of landscapes, architecture, art, cultural history and gardens. But now, in year 2020, the more I’m forced to settle into covid-avoidance-immobility, the more vivid my house-and-garden-bound days here in rural New Hampshire are becoming; this because I’m … Continue reading »
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Tags: 99 yews, angela newing, ann boleyn, anne chambers, anne guy, anniversary maze, another country, architectural fragments, audrey sochor, austenland, bomarzo, borghese villa, bourton house, brenda colvin, broughton grange, buckinghamshire gardens, buscot park, Capability Brown, cartwright-hignett, cat saunders, catherine howard, cecilie goff, cecilie heathcote drummond willoughby, charles bridgeman, charles cockerel, charles cottrell-dormer, charles henderson lord faringdon, chenies manor, Claire Voie, clarence goff, classical sculpture, cliveden, colonnade, costwold escarpment, cotswolds gardens, cottrell-dormer, cyril kleinwort, david guy, david harber sculptor, diany binny, diocese of gloucester, downton abbey, duke of buckingham, dutch garden, dutch style garden, edwardian gardens, edwin lutyens, effie gray, elizabeth tudor, english garden design, english gardens, ernest george, fountain of love, frome river valley, garden antiques, garden design, garden labyrinths, garden maze, garden rooms, garden writer, geoffrey jellicoe, george hamilton earl of orkney, gertrude jekyll, gertrude winthrop, gloucestershire gardens, gold medal chelsea flower show, graham thomas, hal moggridge, harold peto garden, harold peto water garden, harriet duchess of sutherland, heather muir, hell-fire club, henry clubton, Henry VIII, hestercombe, hever castle, hidcote manor, holm oak, holt woolen mills, howards end, hyett family, iford manor, indian gardens, italian garden design, italian villa, james gibbs, james hitchmough, Jane Austen, japanese garden, john fleming, john russell, john vanbrugh, kiftsgate court, labyrinth, labyrinths, lady kleinwort, landscape architecture, lawrence johnston, leaf-cell parterre, lindesfarne, little dorrit, mac leod matthews, maynard colchester, merton borders, michael lythgoe, miserden park, miss austen regrets, moyra goff, munstead wood, Nan Quick, nancy astor, national collection of juglans, national trust, nellie quick, neo-baroque, niki de st phalle, norah lindsay, old parsonage hotel, old parsonage oxford, oscar wilde, Oxford Botanic Garden, oxfordshire gardens, painswick rococo garden, painswick st mark churchyard, patrick melrose, paul alexander, pete moorhouse, philip pullman, queen of the desert, quincunx, river cherwell, river wye, rococo, rousham house, rupert stacey, samuel pepys cockrell, sanditon, sense & sensibility, severn river, sezincote, simon allison, simon verity, sir francis dashwood, sir george hastings, sir richard temple, stowe landscape gardens, terra cotta warriors, the amber spyglass, the courts garden, the crown, the duchess, the faringdon collection, the importance of being earnest, the salutation garden, the secret garden movie, thomas culpepper, thomas daniell, thomas robins, thomas waldo astor, tom stuart-smith, topiary, troy scott smith, upton wold, vann garden, waldorf astor, walnut arboretum, walnut trees, water garden, west wycombe park, westbury brook, westbury court, william astor, william kent, wiltshire gardens, x-men first class
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