Roses In The Garden - a book review
Roses In The Garden by Ngoc Minh Ngo Photographer Ngoc Minh Ngo celebrates rose gardens throughout the world in this beautifully produced book. The author photographed a total of 11 gardens across the globe (Italy, Morocco, Spain, USA, UK, and Japan). Beginning with the Italian garden Ninfa (often referred to as the most romantic garden in the world), her photographs have a dreamy quality that transports the reader to these exotic locales. Closer to home, Floret Farm in Mount Vernon, Washington, is included in one of the chapters. All types of roses are included in the gardens but the majority feature old rose varieties. Many of the gardens have roses growing in wild abandon, intermingled in hedge rows, spilling over walls and fences and surrounded by pastures and rolling hills. A pictorial index lists all the roses and the gardens where they reside. This stunning book was published by Rizzoli Books and is available on Amazon and in bookstores. Text and photos by Phillip Oliver, ...
Hey Phillip...pretty maple!
ReplyDeleteYou've got a blogspot crazy word wrap thing around your photo. Happens to me all the time and drives me a bit nutty trying to fix it without publishing it 10 times to see how it really looks (preview is terrible, isn't it).
If you put the html code for a line break before and after your photo it should fix it. That would be a
used the same way, before and after.
Hope this helps.
Of course, it took out my html code for the line break when I put it in my comment!
ReplyDeleteThanks Cameron, let me see if I can fix that!
ReplyDeleteI love Japanese maples, mostly for the leaves, shape and color. Since they seem to be a favorite of Japanese beetles, I don't grow them. My loss, I know.
ReplyDeleteMarnie
Beautiful! Thanks...I really wanted to read what you had to say, too. :-)
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Cameron
I love that story.. Gail
ReplyDeleteI love staring upwards into trees. This would be the perfect spot for a hammock!
ReplyDeleteBest ,
Philip
The colors you have been posting are fantastic.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! If scares me that Marnie says that Japanese beetles eat Japanese Maples. We have both, but fortunately the beetles must prefer other snacks.
ReplyDeleteI simply adore the J. maples. Can't believe anyone would not appreciate them.
ReplyDeleteI love Japanese maples, too, and your photos are gorgeous. But lying on the ground in October in Virginia?--umm, I'm guessing someone in your household might share my views on that idea. I think dragging out the tarp, the yoga mats and the umbrellas might kind of spoil the moment. Kidding--you've really captured the magic of looking up into trees.
ReplyDeleteI love your photography! Would you mind sharing what your equipment is?
ReplyDeleteThanks Louise. I have a Nikon D50 with various lenses. I also use Photoshop to tweak color, contrast, etc.
ReplyDelete