| Charles James Richardson - 1873 - 528 páginas
...patterns for blind ornaments. 53 03 < of our most eminent writers on gardens, Repton, remarked that " gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts, have much in common ; and the department of architecture which belongs more exclusively to gardens has especially a great affinity... | |
| Daniel Denison Slade - 1895 - 196 páginas
...gardening art is closely associated the style of architecture of the days of Henry and Elizabeth. ' ' Gardening and Architecture, like all the fine arts,...And that department of architecture which belongs to the garden more exclusively, has especially a great affinity with gardening in its broader principles.... | |
| Charles James Richardson - 1898 - 522 páginas
...<M § C ftj .5? Q> o (^ (s) ^ 3 OXK of our most eminent writers on gardens, Kepton, remarked that " gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts, have much in common ; and the department of architecture which belongs more exclusively to gardens has especially a great affinity... | |
| Edward Kemp - 1911 - 386 páginas
...incursion into the territory of a neighboring profession — architecture — with which indeed it is so closely connected, that it would be impossible to...relation between the two than is usually admitted or the ordinary products of practitioners in either art would at all justify us in believing. Architectural... | |
| Massachusetts Horticultural Society - 1875 - 1052 páginas
...form of landscape gardening, are the Italian and Elizabethan styles of architecture. Kemp says,* " Gardening and architecture, like all the fine arts,...affinity with gardening in its broader principles. * How to lay out a Garden. In fact, there is much more relation between the two than is usually admitted,... | |
| |