<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This "one-of-a-kind, offbeat garden design book ... showcases the wildly inventive gardens and gardeners of Buffalo--and offers readers 'the best of the best' ideas to use in their own small-space gardens"--Publisher's description.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><i><b>Buffalo-Style Gardens</i> is a one-of-a-kind, offbeat garden design book that showcases the wildly inventive gardens and gardeners of Buffalo - and offers readers the best of the best" ideas to use in their own small-space gardens.</b><p></p><b>Who knew? Buffalo, New York, is the new Ground Zero for free-spirited garden innovation? </b>Learn from the stories of everyday, non-professional gardeners who have unintentionally transformed Buffalo's urban neighborhoods into a 21st century garden design laboratory. It's all about seeing your space with new eyes and not letting existing limitations on the ground stop you from being out-of-the-box creative. Each July, over 400 private gardens open to the public to show off their fresh, often quirky, take on outdoor living. There's nothing quite like "Garden Walk Buffalo," the largest garden tour in North America.</p><p><b>With hundreds of design, planting and DIY tips</b>, authors and show-garden experts Sally Cunningham and Jim Charlier reveal how fences and furnishings, trees and shrubs, art and whimsy - and the element of surprise - work together to change an ordinary space into something uniquely yours: your own unforgettable Buffalo-style garden.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>If you have ever attended the hugely successful Garden Walk Buffalo -- it welcomes 70,000 garden enthusiasts to 400 private gardens over a two-day summer weekend -- you might think Buffalo-style Gardens, by Sally Cunningham and Jim Charlier is just a book featuring these innovative gardens, and that would be enough. But this book is so much more.</p><br> <p>What is a Buffalo-style garden? Buffalo-style gardens offer different approaches, different sensibilities, no two are remotely alike, according to the authors. The common thread connecting hundreds of gardens is the individual artistic sense of the gardener, their way of personalizing their outdoor space, their love of the objects and plants they bring to it.</p><br> <p>I have attended Garden Walk Buffalo on several occasions. While strolling through the gardens is a great way to pick up design ideas, it may not give you the skills and confidence to tackle a major reworking of your own garden. This is where the beautifully illustrated and thoughtfully written Buffalo-style Gardens really shines. </p><br> <p>Cunningham is a gifted writer, her conversational style is very approachable, and Charlier pipes in with practical tidbits of information and how-to ideas that help to demystify the design process. Their style reminds me of a pair of friends sitting down with you at the table to help you formulate a workable garden plan.</p><br> <p>Having visited many of the gardens in Buffalo-style Gardens myself, turning a page was like revisiting an old friend. With the authors' running commentary, we are encouraged to look beyond the surface of a pretty garden and see why these ideas work.</p><br> <p>If you are considering updating your garden, or just want to see why these gardens are so popular, Buffalo-style Gardens offers plenty of practical, usable advice. Simply put, Buffalo-style gardens are unique, well executed, fun and most of all, well-loved.</p>--Theresa Forte "How to create your own Buffalo-style garden"<br><br>https: //www.gardenrant.com/2019/01/gardens-get-buffaloed.html?fbclid=IwAR06U5lLNvFg3vZbye5j9za_QLRnNU9ljzDZHCtdz1kD-N9470qqDkc6698--Elizabeth Licata "Gardens Get Buffaloed"<br><br>The best way to learn to garden and how to design your garden is to visit other gardens. Luckily, we have a couple recent developments in the US that duplicate the success of the UK's Open Garden Days and their National Garden Scheme. One is the Garden Conservancy Open Days, and the other is the multitude of local garden walks. Ann Arbor's garden walk is slightly older than Buffalo, New York's. Buffalo's is definitely bigger--over a 1,000 gardens in their metro area in New York and Canada. That's probably why the authors lay claim to this gardening trend, one that makes paint, whimsy, and found objects almost as important as the plants. This book just makes me smile: the generous illustrations make it the next best thing to being in Buffalo at THEIR best time of the year.--Carla Bayha "Buffalo-Style Gardens"<br><br><p>WOW... It's hard to write about a book when the introductory chapter exclaims it is "A New Kind of Garden: livable, relatable, original, free spirited."</p> <p>Have you heard about <i>Buffalo-Style Gardens</i>? That is the title of a book published in 2019 by St. Lynn's Press and authored by Sally Cunningham and Jim Charlier. As an aside, Buffalo, New York, will celebrate its silver anniversary of garden walks. Buffalo and environs are home to some of the largest number of residential gardens on private tour in North America. To be sure, these are very different types of landscapes than those portrayed in most other landscape texts. Something wonderful must be happening in Buffalo because more people tour these gardens than the combined attendance of two Disney parks. </p> <p>If you are a big fan of color in the garden then consider the sub-title of <i>Buffalo-Style Gardens</i> that teases what is between the covers: "Create a Quirky, One-of-a-Kind Private Garden with Eye-Catching Designs." This is a book where one can see how riots of color and whimsy are personified. The book goes beyond the usual use of colorful flowers and shrubs as it includes the total integration of other plant material with hardscape (e.g., walkway), furniture (perhaps repurposed) and more. In this regard, psychologists use the word gestalt. Funk & Wagnall's Standard Dictionary of the English Language defines gestalt as an arrangement of separate elements of experience, emotion, etc., in a form, pattern or configuration so integrated as to appear and function as a unit that is more than a simple summation of its parts. <p>That nails the essence of a Buffalo-style garden. The authors refer to this as "a garden design laboratory for our 21st century sensibilities and lifestyle." </p> <p>... Words and colorful photos do justice to the understanding of what these type gardens are all about. You too can emulate your inner being. Color up those drab Adirondack chairs, use sculpture, go to the thrift store and look for an out of the ordinary bench to color. If you are a collector of (you name it), show it off. These are all personal statements, so make this a YOU garden or, as the book says, go bold or go home. ... Surely it is not a Japanese-like garden, English garden, rose garden, pollinator garden or any other kind of specialty garden. Now you have created a one-of-a-kind Buffalo-style garden. Good for you, or as noted at the opening: WOW!</p>--George Graine<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Sally Cunningham</b> is a horticulture professional, garden consultant, and head of the Great Garden Travel division of AAA of Western and Central New York. She conducts tours in the U.S., Canada and Europe, and speaks nationally on horticultural topics. She writes a weekly garden column for <i>The Buffalo News</i> and a monthly column for <i>Buffalo Spree</i> magazine. Cunningham and co-author Jim Charlier are leading figures in Buffalo's "urban garden renaissance" and the much-lauded Garden Walk Buffalo, the largest private garden tour in America, averaging 65,000-plus visitors each year. <p/><b>Jim Charlier</b> is an award-winning marketing and design professional. An avid gardener, garden photographer, and garden tourism advocate, he consults with gardening organizations across the U.S. He is co-founder and vice president of Gardens Buffalo Niagara, coordinating 20 community garden tours and 75 regional Open Gardens - including the centerpiece event, Garden Walk Buffalo. In total, these garden events attract upwards of 100,000 visitors each summer. His own highly original Buffalo garden has appeared in many books, magazines, tours and on television.
Cheapest price in the interval: 16.89 on November 6, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 16.89 on February 5, 2022
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