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Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Barb Rosen

Blogger | Wilmington, DE http://ourfairfieldhomeandgarden.com
9K Followers 5.6KLikes 103604 Shares
  • Overview
  • Posts143
  • Q&A32
  • Comments1K
  • Boards18
  • Clips1K
  • Likes2K
  • Following237
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My Recent Boards

  • Pretty Planters (also see http://pinter...
  • The Garden Shed (inside
  • Raised Beds are the Rage!
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Featured Photos

About Me:

Love home gardening and decorating projects. See them on my new website/blog at http://ourfairfieldhomeandgarden.com

Favorite area of home improvement:

Garden & Landscaping projects, home styling and repurposing items


Recent Activity


  • $2 Stair rails from Home Depot and I used boards that I shaped into wings using my scroll saw....
  • Stencils and drawer pull with some copper wire for the antenae 1

Dragonflies...

I made these for my sister's birthday ... I did NOT use ceiling fan blades. I couldn't fathom sealing them enough that they wouldn't warp. I just bought some nice thin boards and used my ...»
scroll saw to shape them. Very pleased with the result! $40 for 2

8 Hours 40 Moderate
Delyne Nunez
Delyne Nunez Houston, TX
1 Comment | Post Comment | 156 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Liked 14 hours ago
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JUST SHARING WHAT IS PUTTING ON A SHOW

Yeay, so pleased with my gladioli and lantanas. Do you see the anemones sprouting too?
Pamela F
Pamela F Hinesville, GA
1 Comment | Post Comment | 25 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Liked 14 hours ago
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  • DIY dresser drawer dog bed: add some feet and paint!  - parasol up for a bit of shade.
  • DIY dog bed - parasol down for sun or overcast days. Pantone's 2013 Color of the Year: Emerald.
  • DIY {dresser drawer} dog bed - no parasol for indoor use.
  • Repurposing a dresser drawer.
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Spoiling the Dog! DIY Dog Bed {repurposed Dresser Drawer}

An old dresser drawer makes for a great dog bed. Just ask Rosie. Add a parasol for a bit of shade (and fun).
DIY Show Off
DIY Show Off Pittsburgh, PA
8 Comments | Post Comment | 229 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Commented 18 hours ago
    When I die, I'm coming back as your dog : )
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  • DIY project
  • The Shade Path garden: Variegated Solomon Seal (Polygonatum odoratum 'Variegatum') in front of the blue flowers of Brunnera 'Jack Frost'.
  • View down the Shade Path this May... forget-me-nots (Myosotis), chartreuse inflorescence of Euphorbias, hosta, ferns and many others.
  • Forget-me-not-like flowers of Brunnera 'Jack Frost'
  • Our new Fothergilla bush is flowering this month, and goes so nicely with the Euphorbia!
  • This pretty patch work is of a lungwort (Pulmonaria) and a wood spurge (Euphorbia).
  • Tulip 'White Parrot'...Parrot tulips are known for their unusual markings and shape. It is a nice, frilly addition to the front of the sunny end of this garden that is mostly in shade.
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Scenes From the Shade Path Garden

Here are some views of our Shade Path garden from the past couple of weeks. I love when it turns to this blue and white phase... so peaceful...
Julie @ Wife, Mother, Gardener
Julie @ Wife, Mother, Gar... Pittsburgh, PA
2 Comments | Post Comment | 210 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Commented 18 hours ago
    Julie ~ your plant combinations are wonderful, each playing up the best feature of the other! ...»
    Happy Gardening!

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  • Beautiful plants!
  • After washing & letting the railings dry overnight, I used a small roller to apply the stain.Some sections of wood took the stain better than others-so I had to "eye-ball" I rolled & gently wiped off some of the stain till I liked it!
Clipped a photo from:

Giving Pressure Treated Wood a White Washed Look

All Things Heart and Home
All Things Heart and Home Marietta, GA
Comment on this photo
  • Barb Rosen
    Clipped 18 hours ago to Front Porches ~ Sit a Spell!
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  • Front Porches ~ Sit...
  • Just a couple of days and a gallon of Behr Semi Transparent Stain in Pinto White and I got the soft white wash look I was going for!
  • Here's a glimpse of the railings before ...they gave the screen porch an unfinished feel...
  • After washing & letting the railings dry overnight, I used a small roller to apply the stain.Some sections of wood took the stain better than others-so I had to "eye-ball" I rolled & gently wiped off some of the stain till I liked it!
  • The process was easy but tedious because I really had to step back & evaluate small sections before moving on. Bindi said to tell you she was worn out by the whole project! xo
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Giving Pressure Treated Wood a White Washed Look

My porch project is well underway and next to figuring out what to do with the floor, the railings were at the top of my least-favorite-thing list! The pressure treated wood had that ...»
yellowish tint and honestly made the porch feel unfinished. But a little help from Behr Semi Transparent Stain and I got the soft white washed look I wanted!

All Things Heart and Home
All Things Heart and Home Marietta, GA
Post Comment | 93 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Liked 18 hours ago
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Garden

A friend gave me this amaryliss about 2 years ago and finally it bloomed.
Judith F
Judith F Wills Point, TX
3 Comments | Post Comment | 52 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Liked 20 hours ago
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  • a vintage-inspired guest bathroom
  • red and turquoise guest bathroom
  • storage for towels with a wire basket and a hand painted sign that I made
  • baskets above the door for extra storage
  • picture frame moulding with a glass tile border detail
  • vintage bottles for soap
  • after
  • before (I put up the wainscoting a few years back)
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Guest Bathroom Reveal {Vintage Inspired}

I'm so excited to share our guest bathroom makeover that was done with mostly paint and a few vintage-inspired accessories! It's only a 6' x 8' space, so I tried to pack as much ...»
personality and color into the room without going overboard with a theme.

http://www.simplicityinthesouth.com/2013/05...

Tricia @ Simplicity In The South
Tricia @ Simplicity In Th... Greenville, SC
17 Comments | Post Comment | 4180 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Liked 20 hours ago
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  • Home design wish li...
  • Decor Ideas

Gardens.

My whimsical totem, a beautiful amaryliss , and first time baby Bok Choy!
Judith F
Judith F Wills Point, TX
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    Liked 20 hours ago
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  • Good landscaping turns your home into a show-stopper.
  • Recycled fence and spindles for potting bench
  • #1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood, pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it!  I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!
  • #2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras. 1
  • #3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them.  Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.
  • #4 - Watch for end-of-season sales.  You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers.  That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!
  • #5 - Grow your own plants from seed.  Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well.  Hardy geraniums, sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed.  Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden.  Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden!
  • #6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily.  Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm.  I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden.  I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.
  • See 5 more photos

6 Ways to Landscape Without Breaking the Budget

I'm back to my first love these days - gardening! I love being in the garden, digging, planting, sowing and enjoying. This house will be the 6th that I've landscaped and because I always ...»
seem to buy houses that have no landscaping, I have learned how to do it on the cheap.

Here are some of my best tips: .

#1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood,pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it! I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!

#2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras.

#3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them. Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.

#4 - Watch for end-of-season sales. You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers. That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!

#5 - Grow your own plants from seed. Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well. Hardy geraniums,sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed. Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden. Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden

#6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily. Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm. I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden. I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.

The best part about rampant growers and self-seeders is that every year, you can dig up the extras and sell them at a yard sale to make some extra cash for the landscaping items that you can't get for free.

Hope I've been able to give you at least one tip you can use. Happy gardening!

#landscaping #gardening #Maygarden

Anne @ DesignDreams by Anne
Anne @ DesignDreams by An... Canada
30 Comments | Post Comment | 15698 Views
  • Barb Rosen
    Commented 20 hours ago
    Oh, yes it is! How lucky to have a neighbor close by to give you great ideas, Anne!
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