DP Celebrates 31,000 Titles

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Distributed Proofreaders is proud to celebrate its 31,000th title, Colour in the Flower Garden — many thanks to all the volunteers who worked on it!

lilies

WHITE LILIES.

Gertrude Jekyll, probably (after Capability Brown) the most famous English garden designer, lived from 1843 to 1932 and created at least 400 major gardens within Europe and North America, often working closely with the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens. She set out to develop a career as a painter, but developed an interest in the use of colour in planting, and, possibly prompted by deteriorating eyesight, moved into garden design. She was heavily influenced by Impressionism, eschewing excessive formality in design and planting.

Her book Colour in the Flower Garden sums up the experience of 40 years, using the garden she designed for herself at Munstead Wood. The book describes her philosophy in detail and gives detailed planting schemes for many areas of the garden, but is by no means prescriptive. She describes what she has done and why, and lets the results speak for themselves.

It is also profusely illustrated with, regrettably monochrome, photographs of the garden.

For the gardener, it is a very accessible and interesting record, but from an age and of a scale which make it, perhaps, less than useful.

Two quotations give a flavour of the scale and ambition.

Talking of flower borders: “I believe that the only way in which it can be made successful is to devote certain borders to certain times of year; each border or garden region to be bright for from one to three months.”

And about one area of her garden: “Ten acres is but a small area for a bit of woodland, yet it can be made apparently much larger by well-considered treatment.”

I look out at my own garden (20 x 8 meters) and think, “I grow plants, but this is not, by Jekyll’s standards, a garden.”

This post was contributed by Les Galloway, a DP volunteer who post-processed this project.

 

5 Responses to DP Celebrates 31,000 Titles

  1. jjz says:

    10 acres, small? 🙂 It is a shame the illustrations aren’t in colour but they do show how beautiful it all is. The ebook certainly does justice to the original publication. Well done all who worked on it, and especially of course the PM and PPer. Great job! and thank you.

  2. genknit says:

    Ten ACRES? For a garden? Wowza. That’s one-eighth of the size of the family farm I grew up on in Michigan. I don’t think we thought of it as a flower garden (though, in a sense, it was–all the crops grown there did flower!).

    Sounds like it would have been a fun book to smooth-read. I think I shall go get a copy from DP. Thanks for the review.

  3. Elizabeth Oscanyan says:

    No, 10 Acres for a woodland. I have seen beautiful gardens (gardenettes?) of just a few square meters, too.

  4. […] 31,000 titles. In December 2015, DP posted its 31,000th unique title to Project Gutenberg, Colour in the Flower Garden. You can read all about it in this celebratory post. […]

  5. […] 31,000 titles. Our 31,000th book, posted on December 27, 2015, was Colour in the Flower Garden. The author, Gertrude Jekyll, was a famous horticulturist and garden designer whose approach to garden design has had a huge impact on gardens throughout Europe, England, and North America. You can read more about her and her book in this celebratory blog post. […]

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