An inquiry into the changes of taste in landscape gardening, 1806 > Part I. Historical Notices.
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