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Book:
An inquiry into the changes of taste in landscape gardening, 1806
Part I. Historical Notices.
Taste and fashion
Origin of Fashion
Changes in the fashion
Fashion in dress, furniture and architecture
Fashion in gardening
Italian style of garden design
Dutch style of garden design
English style of garden design
Lancelot Brown's style of garden design
Corruptions of Brown's style of garden design
Extent and beauty in gardens
Landscape park scenery
Garden scenery
Woburn Abbey garden design
Cheerful and melancholy lawns
Similarities between houses and gardens
Application of good taste to gardens
Changes to ground near houses
Kitchen gardens
Winter gardens
Changes in planting design
Regular curves
Clumps, or platoons, of trees
Destruction of avenues
Naturalistic planting - nature abhors a straight line
Lancelot Brown's belt planting
Variety destroyed by its excess
The Evergreen Drive at Woburn Abbey
How to produce variety in gardens
Forest groups and thickets
Avenues and fashion
Termination of long avenues
Felling of avenue trees
Gardens as works of art
Palace outbuildings, appendages and offices
Appendages attached to palaces
Detached estate buildings
Separate establishments in gardens
Dairy farm buildings
Park buildings
Conclusion to Repton's Inquiry
Taste and fashion
Origin of Fashion
Changes in the fashion
Fashion in dress, furniture and architecture
Fashion in gardening
Italian style of garden design
Dutch style of garden design
English style of garden design
Lancelot Brown's style of garden design
Corruptions of Brown's style of garden design
Extent and beauty in gardens
Landscape park scenery
Garden scenery
Woburn Abbey garden design
Cheerful and melancholy lawns
Similarities between houses and gardens
Application of good taste to gardens
Changes to ground near houses
Kitchen gardens
Winter gardens
Changes in planting design
Regular curves
Clumps, or platoons, of trees
Destruction of avenues
Naturalistic planting - nature abhors a straight line
Lancelot Brown's belt planting
Variety destroyed by its excess
The Evergreen Drive at Woburn Abbey
How to produce variety in gardens
Forest groups and thickets
Avenues and fashion
Termination of long avenues
Felling of avenue trees
Gardens as works of art
Palace outbuildings, appendages and offices
Appendages attached to palaces
Detached estate buildings
Separate establishments in gardens
Dairy farm buildings
Park buildings
Conclusion to Repton's Inquiry
Taste and fashion
Origin of Fashion
Changes in the fashion
Fashion in dress, furniture and architecture
Fashion in gardening
Italian style of garden design
Dutch style of garden design
English style of garden design
Lancelot Brown's style of garden design
Corruptions of Brown's style of garden design
Extent and beauty in gardens
Landscape park scenery
Garden scenery
Woburn Abbey garden design
Cheerful and melancholy lawns
Similarities between houses and gardens
Application of good taste to gardens
Changes to ground near houses
Kitchen gardens
Winter gardens
Changes in planting design
Regular curves
Clumps, or platoons, of trees
Destruction of avenues
Naturalistic planting - nature abhors a straight line
Lancelot Brown's belt planting
Variety destroyed by its excess
The Evergreen Drive at Woburn Abbey
How to produce variety in gardens
Forest groups and thickets
Avenues and fashion
Termination of long avenues
Felling of avenue trees
Gardens as works of art
Palace outbuildings, appendages and offices
Appendages attached to palaces
Detached estate buildings
Separate establishments in gardens
Dairy farm buildings
Park buildings
Conclusion to Repton's Inquiry