After my "Super Fans" luncheon and garden tour last week, members of the group traveled together to visit some familiar shops, studios, and eateries in the area - the Orangerie Garden + Home, a charming shop and nursery owned by my friend Anthony Bellomo in Millbrook, New York, the pottery shop of master potter, Guy Wolff, the home and garden store and café, Terrain, in Westport, Connecticut, and my former home Turkey Hill.
Enjoy these photos.
Guy’s shop is located in the small borough of picturesque Litchfield County – originally in Woodville and now in Bantam. The front is a restored 1740 post and beam structure, which houses his showroom. An addition on the back is his work space.
At the entrance, Guy still has the old Woodville sign hung up by the front door and window.
Guy displays some of his red terra cotta pots. These pots were made by Guy or his wife, Erica.
Guy also displays some of his pots in use. These are terra cotta pots in the back of the shop. Terra cotta comes from the Italian term for “baked-earth,” ceramic pottery. It is made out of a coarse, porous type of clay that is high in iron oxides.
The showroom and studio is a charming space filled with redware and stoneware in the front. Redware is an unglazed or dry-bodied stoneware.
On another side – dozens of beautiful white clay vessels with decorative edges.
Here’s devotee Bernie Wong looking at some of the lighter clay pots. On the side of his pots, Guy also stamps his name and the wet weight of the clay used. This standardized system for horticultural pots was adopted by Victorian potters.
Through a small doorway is the additional room where all the pots are created. Look closely – the corner wall behind the potter’s wheel is filled with small tools called coggles, roulettes, or rolling stamps, which are used to decorate the pottery.
Here’s a pot Guy is working on now. Every pot is handmade right here in his shop.
All of Guy’s pots are hand thrown, so no two are exactly alike.
Here is Guy with devotee, Nathan Schmidt with his purchase.
The next stop was at the charming shop and nursery, Orangerie Garden + Home, where owner Anthony Bellomo sells many home items as well as gardening supplies and seasonal plants. Here’s the group pictured with Anthony in front of the shop.
The group admired these giant ostrich eggs…
… and the hand carved moose antlers.
Andrew Ritchie took many photos of the displays around the shop. Everything was so beautifully presented including these scented candles.
The nursery was filled with lots of greenery.
Then it was a drive to Connecticut’s Terrain, another quaint store filled with home and garden products.
The group stopped for a late afternoon meal at the Terrain Café, which focuses on seasonally inspired lunches and dinners.
Here’s a photo of the breads – cooked in terra cotta pots to give them a crusty, brown outside and a soft, chewy inside.
Terrain sells a variety of plants, including potted houseplants, shrubs, fruiting trees, and fresh flowers. They also carry gardening supplies and other interesting gifts.
Here is the group in front of the old Adams House in Westport. I helped to renovate this home with my late brother, George. You may have seen it in my 1992 book, “Martha Stewart’s New Old House: Restoration, Renovation, Decoration, Landscaping.”
And they also stopped at the local Goodwill to see what they could find – Nathan found a Martha Stewart pie plate.
Here are Bernie, Andrew Ritchie, and Dennis Landon, driving to the next spot. I wonder where it is…
The day ended with a photo in front of my former home, Turkey Hill. It was a great day and a great trip for this community of devoted fans.
Hard to resist the intoxicating scent of a garden rose.
I have many, many roses - a group of my newly released Martha Stewart hybrid tea roses and a collection of climbers are planted in a cutting garden adjacent to my chickens coops, but I also have roses in my perennial flower garden, in my allée of lilacs, and in a more formal space behind my main greenhouse. It is a 68-foot by 30-foot rose garden that includes floribunda, hybrid tea, and shrub roses - all with gorgeous color, form, and fragrance.
Here are some photos, enjoy.
I planted more than 120 roses in this space. Roses offer such an abundance of blooms, it looks so beautiful when planted in large quantities.
I planted a variety of floribunda roses, hybrid tea roses, and shrub roses.
This garden is surrounded with boxwood. Large boxwood shrubs anchor the corners and mark the center footpath of the garden.
The smaller boxwood, which I nurtured from bare-root cuttings fill in the rest of the perimeter. Buxus is a genus of about 70 species in the family Buxaceae. Common names include box or boxwood. Boxwood is native to western and southern Europe, southwest, southern and eastern Asia, Africa, Madagascar, northernmost South America, Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean.
All of these roses came from rosarian Danielle Dall’Armi Hahn, the owner of Rose Story Farm in Carpinteria, California and author of “The Color of Roses,” published by Ten Speed Press.
Right now there are gorgeous, fragrant blooms, some as big as one’s hand.
Hybrid tea roses, also called large-flowered roses, usually have only one flower per stem and tend to flower in three flushes from summer to late autumn. Floribundas or cluster-flowered roses have many flowers per stem and tend to repeat-flower continuously from summer to late autumn.
This garden includes a variety of different colors from dark pink to apricot to lavender, yellow, and creamy white.
A rose is a woody perennial flowering plant of the genus Rosa, in the family Rosaceae. There are more than a hundred species and thousands of cultivars.
The leaves of the rose are described as “pinnate” – meaning there is a central rib and then leaflets off to each side, with one terminal leaflet. Rose leaves can have anywhere from two to 13 leaflets. And rose stems are often armed with sharp prickles – they aren’t thorns at all. Unlike a thorn, a prickle can be easily broken off the plant because it is really a feature of the outer layers rather than part of the wood, like a thorn.
Garden roses are mostly grown as ornamental plants. They are among the most popular and widely cultivated groups of flowering plants, especially in temperate climates.
When selecting a location, plant roses in a sunny spot where they can get at least six hours of sun and good drainage.
Rose roots grow deep, so also be sure there is adequate room for the roots to spread.
These are strong disease resistant varieties. Many roses are bred and selected to resist the most common rose problems.
When watering roses, give them the equivalent to one-inch of rainfall per week during the growing season.
And don’t forget to feed. As I often say, if you eat, so should the plants. Keep roses well-fed with a slow release formula specifically for roses.
When pruning in early spring, prune with the goal of opening the center of the plant or shrub to let in better light and air circulation within and between the plants.
As part of a yearly maintenance program, also eliminate dead, dying, and diseased plants and plant parts to help keep the garden healthy. When needed replace plants with new, healthy ones.
Given the right care, healthy roses can bloom through summer and all the way until early fall.
This rose garden is flourishing behind my berry patches in an area where guests can see them in their splendor. I am so pleased with how it is doing.
It's always so much fun to see the familiar through someone else's lens.
After last week's event celebrating 30 "Super Fans" of the Martha Stewart brand, many of them sent in their own photos taken from the day's events - the breakfast on my terrace parterre, the walking tour through my gardens, and the luncheon under my large pavilion. It's always interesting to know what others "see" on my farm, what captures their attention, and what inspires them to do their own projects once they return home.
Here are some of those images taken by my guests, enjoy.
This photo of my guest Tenant House was taken by Andrew Ritchie. Andrew is the creator of the “Martha Moments” blog and online community. Most of the attendees met through “Martha Moments” and have become good friends. (Photo by Andrew Ritchie)
Andrew designed and founded his “Martha Moments” blog in 2006 as a content archive written for fans and collectors of the Martha Stewart brand. It continues to delight readers 19 years later.(Photo by Andrew Ritchie)
Here’s another photo Andrew captured of my long and winding pergola. (Photo by Andrew Ritchie)
And this is my Basket House – always an interesting stop along any garden tour. (Photo by Andrew Ritchie)
Dennis Landon, another longtime devotee and “Martha Moments” follower, took this snapshot of his husband, Bernie and devotees Justin Giannunzio and Nathan Schmidt, carrying gifts for me from the group – a gorgeous and unique fern and a bucket of wonderful items from each of the attendees. (Photo by Dennis Landon)
Carey Lowe took this photo of one side of my glass greenhouse facing my expansive berry patch garden. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
Inside my perennial flower cutting garden, Carey looked down and captured the lush, green lady’s mantle, Alchemilla mollis – a perennial ground cover with large circular scallop-edged leaves and chartreuse flower clusters. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
The day’s breakfast started off with some pastries and hardboiled eggs from my chickens. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
And of course, some of my daily green juice. I make it fresh every day.(Photo by Carey Lowe)
Guests always catch the details. Here is one photo of a porch light. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
And a trough outside my stable holding two small potted sago palms. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
Dessert from the luncheon – taken from above. This flan was delicious. Not one piece was left over. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
All the fencing around my farm is made from 100-year-old white spruce railings I purchased in Canada. When the fences were built, I used new cedar uprights to support them. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
This is the south side of my stable complex which includes my carriage house turned meeting room. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
Kristina Closs took this photo of our lunch table before everyone sat down. The table was made out of an old yew tree I took down at my former East Hampton home. (Photo by Kristina Closs)
Lunch was flavorful paella made three ways – for seafood lovers, meat lovers and vegetarians. (Photo by Kristina Closs)
And although the peak of peony season was over at my farm, there were still many gorgeous blooms all around.(Photo by Kristina Closs)
Good selfie, Nathan! This one taken on my terrace outside my Winter House. (Photo by Nathan Schmidt)
Here’s a photo of Nathan and Carey at the east end of my long Boxwood Allée. (Photo by Nathan Schmidt)
Nathan took this photo also – my Tenant House with so many ostrich ferns growing in the garden. (Photo by Nathan Schmidt)
Here’s another peony just opening. (Photo by Nathan Schmidt)
Here are the staddle stones at the north end of my pool. It was hard to resist a jump in the water on this day – it was very warm and humid. (Photo by Hayden Regina)
Here are Hayden Regina and my head gardener Ryan McCallister. (Photo by Hayden Regina)
Rachel Butler took this picture as the group walked past the hosta garden under the dappled shade of my Metasequoia trees. (Photo by Rachel Butler)
And here’s the climbing hydrangea – it’s blooming so lovely this season. (Photo by Rachel Butler)
The group loved visiting the horses in my stable. My Friesians, Fell pony, and donkeys love all the attention. This is Geert.(Photo by Rachel Butler)
The group gave every member of my farm staff a gift bag. It was such a wonderful and thoughtful gesture. Everyone on the farm was thrilled. (Photo by Jennifer Zimmerman)
And for me, each guest gifted me with something handmade or specially selected from their home state. I loved every gift. (Photo by Jennifer Zimmerman)
Here’s a photo of Bernie Wong and Dennis Landon who came all the way fro Wisconsin to attend the celebration. (Photo by Jennifer Zimmerman)
Justin took lots of photos of the gardens. Right now the roses are putting on a great show. (Photo by Justin Giannunzio)
Here’s Dennis, Andrew, Bernie, and Justin – having a breakfast of a lifetime. (Photo by Justin Giannunzio)
Jordan Munn is a photographer from Quebec and brought his cameras to take his photos. This is a view looking down the center of my flower garden. (Photo by Jordan Munn)
And here is one of an allée of lindens that runs from my pergola all the way down to my chicken coops. (Photo by Carey Lowe)
And here is a shady view of the carriage road under my majestic pin oaks. What a special day. Thanks to all my devotees who attended and made the day so much fun! (Photo by Jordan Munn)