Showing posts with label Color combinations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Color combinations. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2012

Natural Companions:Book Review & Giveaway

Image by Ellen Hoverkamp © Natural Companions by Ken Druse with Botanical Photographs by Ellen Hoverkamp. Published in 2012 by Stewart, Tabori & Chang, New York. An imprint of ABRAMS. 


I am really excited about this particular book and giveaway. 

I first leafed through the glossy pages of Natural Companions back in early spring. My first thought was, "Wow! This is absolutely gorgeous. All my gardening friends would really enjoy this book."

I determined there and then to track down a review copy of the book. Many, many emails later, I am very pleased to write this short review and give a copy of this beautiful book away to one very lucky reader.

Image by Ken Druse © Natural Companions by Ken Druse with Botanical Photographs by Ellen Hoverkamp. Published in 2012 by Stewart, Tabori & Chang, New York. An imprint of ABRAMS. 

This coming winter, when the snow is flying, and your summer garden is but a distant memory, this is exactly the kind of book you are going to want to reach for. 

Grab a coffee, and maybe even a big piece of chocolate cake (this book calls for a little decadence) before you settle in to read in your favourite chair. Not so mundane as to weigh down the imagination with practical considerations, the pages of this book are where flights of fancy can take wing.


Natural Companions is the collaboration of well-known writer-photographer Ken Druse, and artist Ellen Hoverkamp. Through a series of essays, the author presents plant pairings in a fresh new way. The book covers a broad range of related topics that are organized according to the seasons and are illustrated with a mix of Ken's garden photography and Ellen's botanical images.

Image by Ellen Hoverkamp © Natural Companions by Ken Druse with Botanical Photographs by Ellen Hoverkamp. Published in 2012 by Stewart, Tabori & Chang, New York. An imprint of ABRAMS. 

To make each of the book's images, Ellen's Hoverkamp painstakingly arranged plant specimens facedown on the glass of a large format flatbed scanner. Sometimes wires were necessary to suspend the flowers so they would not get crushed. The resulting image immortalizes a moment in the garden and exquisitely illustrates one of Ken Druse's suggested planting combinations. The technology employed to create the images may be modern, but the final artowrk harkens back to traditional botanical illustration.

Image by Ellen Hoverkamp © Natural Companions by Ken Druse with Botanical Photographs by Ellen Hoverkamp. Published in 2012 by Stewart, Tabori & Chang, New York. An imprint of ABRAMS. 

Image by Ellen Hoverkamp © Natural Companions by Ken Druse with Botanical Photographs by Ellen Hoverkamp. Published in 2012 by Stewart, Tabori & Chang, New York. An imprint of ABRAMS. 

Height, size, color, texture, bloom time: the factors involved in considering planting combinations can seem overwhelming. The calm orderliness of Natural Companion's botanical images and Ken Druse's witty, entertaining writing style seem to demystify the process of selecting companion plantings. 

You are going to love this book!

P.S. I notice that Natural Companions is much more affordable if you order it online from Amazon or Chapters in Canada. Take a peek in the store and then order it online to save yourself some money.

If you would like to be included in the draw for the copy of Natural Companions, please leave a comment below. The contest will remain open for a full week (until next Monday at 12pm, my time). The draw and winning announcement will take place early the following week.

Many thanks to Ken Druse, and Stewart, Tabori & Chang for providing a book for this giveaway. Thanks also to Larissa for her help in making all the arrangements for this review and giveaway. 

Good luck everyone!

I am going to link this post to Holley's monthly book review party. To find reviews on many other great gardening books, be sure to click the link: Roses and Other Gardening Joys.



More Information and Links:

Author, Ken Druse: Ken Druse is the author of over a dozen award-winning books. He has a weekly radio show,"Ken Druse- Real Dirt" on public radio, The radio show is also available as a podcast on his website. His writing can be found in the New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, House Beautiful and many other magazines. Ken Druse lives in New Jersey and Brooklyn, New York. Visit his website: KenDruse.com
Photographer, Ellen Hoverkamp: Ellen has been creating fine art photographs using a flat bed scanner since 1997. Her large archival prints have been exhibited in galleries, and garden-related venues throughout North America. She her home in West Haven, Connecticut.  Medium and large sized archival prints of her photographs are available through her online shop. Visit her website: myneighborsgarden.com

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Color and the Perennial Placement Chess Game

Balloon Flower

I would like to be able to say that after standing for ten, fifteen minuets at a time weighing all the relevant factors, that I always place new perennials in the perfect spot. It would be wonderful if this time spent was rewarded with success!


But if I am being honest, I get placement wrong more times than I get it right. Often, I feel discouraged and think that I simply waste time standing in front of one of my flower borders carefully considering plant size and height, while weighing leaf color, shape and texture and calculating into the equation bloom time and color, only to come up an answer that I live to regret.

And I can't tell you how often I have looked at an overcrowded border and thought, "What was I thinking???"

If I simply tossed my trowel into a bed, and planted the new recruit wherever it landed I might be just as successful!


Needless to say, I shift perennials around a fair bit. I am out in the garden as soon as the weather permits playing, what I have come to call, placement chess in the garden. I simply move plants around until I am happy with the results.


I worked for years in the art department of a wallpaper company and that experience has given me a fearless love of color.


Bring it on! 


Bright colors are so happy, what's not to love.

My June garden is all pinks ands soft purples. My July garden is, on the contrary, bright oranges, yellow, pink and hot purple with a dash of warm blue thrown in.

There is no color I dislike- well maybe soft peach-



but then, peach worked into a complimentary color combination can be wonderful!


Peach lilies and grey Artemisia with purple and yellow as background melody.


Equally appealing to me are soft shades in the right setting. I've mixed these salmon colored daylilies with a dark maroon daylily with a yellow throat.



One look at my garden and you realize that I don't believe in color rules. Its more fun to push the envelope and mix colors together that may not seem obviously suited to one another.


Most people might think that yellow and purple are a bit whacky together, but I love the odd combination.


I think its even fun to play it safe and repeat a single color in variations.


So tell me, what are your favorite garden color combinations?