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#Hartley’s grange
justme-victoria · 10 months
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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sometimes the place you ran away from is the where you find your heart and home… 🦘
🦘 rural aussie romance
🦘 fashion designer & sheep farmer
🦘 rebuilding one’s life
🦘 sweet & swoony
🦘 small town life
Rural romance is always such a comfy and familiar read for me, and this book was no different - Nicole has perfectly captured the personalities of small-town Aussies so effortlessly, and even the fictional setting of Violet Falls seems so real.
TW: bushfires
🔗FULL REVIEW: https://bit.ly/Review-HartleysGrange
#HartleysGrange #NicoleHurleyMoore #VioletFalls #ruralromance #Australianromance #Aussieromance #romancebooks #romancereader #romancereads #bookreview #readin2023 #2023reads
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sesalesstat · 10 months
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EVOLUTION OF CINEMATOGRAPH ( 19 CENTURY )
1832
The Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau and the Austrian professor of practical geometry Simon Stampfer invented the Phenakistiscope, the first practical device to create a fluid illusion of motion.
1878
Using a battery of 12 cameras Eadweard Muybridge records several series of The Horse in Motion, capturing successive phases of movements that allowed his patron Leland Stanford to study the positions of the legs of his race horses during different gaits
 1882
Étienne-Jules Marey developed the Chronophotographe, which could take 12 pictures per second from a single viewpoint.
 1888
In Leeds, England Louis Le Prince films Roundhay Garden Scene, believed to be the first motion picture recorded. Sarah Whitley, Joseph Whitley and Annie Hartley in the garden of Oakwood Grange, leisurely walking around the garden of the premises. Sarah is seen walking – or dancing – backward as she turns around, and Joseph's coattails are seen flying as he also is turning.
 1889 or 1890
By William Kennedy Dickson and William Heise. Monkeyshines is a series of experimental short silent films made to test the original cylinder format of the Kinetoscope, and are believed to be the first films shot in the United States.
 1891
Dickson Greeting, by William Kennedy Dickson was the first semi-public demonstration of cinematographic pictures in the United States. The National Federation of Women's Clubs were shown a 3 second clip of Dickson passing a hat in front of himself, and reaching for it with his other hand on May 20, 1891 at Edison's laboratory.
1892
On 28 October 1892 Charles-Émile Reynaud gave the first public performance of a moving picture show at the Musée Grévin in Paris, the Théâtre Optique. The show, billed as Pantomimes Lumineuses, included three cartoons, Pauvre Pierrot, Un bon bock, and Le Clown et ses chiens, each consisting of 500 to 600 individually painted images and lasting about 15 minutes.
 1893
Blacksmith Scene, by William Kennedy Dickson. The first Kinetoscope film shown in public exhibition on May 9, 1893 and is the earliest known example of actors performing a role in a film.
 1894
On April 14, 1894, a public Kinetoscope parlor was opened by the Holland Bros. in New York City at 1155 Broadway—the first commercial motion picture house. For 25 cents a viewer could see all the films in either row.
The Dolorita Passion Dance was banned in New Jersey after its use in peepshows (pornographic). Russell Kick quotes the work Censorship as saying it "was probably the first [film] to be banned in the United States."
La Sortie des Usines, the first film to be made in France.
The Dickson Experimental Sound Film by William Kennedy Dickson. It is the first known film with live-recorded sound and appears to be the first motion picture made for the Kinetophone, the proto-sound-film system developed by Dickson and Thomas Edison.
  1895
First hand-colored film, Annabelle Serpentine Dance by William Kennedy Dickson.
Charles Francis Jenkins displays the Phantascope, the first patented Film projector.
Incident at Clovelly Cottage by Robert W. Paul and Birt Acres is the first film to be made in the United Kingdom.
L'Arroseur Arrosé, the first comedy film.
The Execution of Mary Stuart, the first use of a special effect in a movie.
History of the Kinetograph, Kinetoscope, and Kinetophonograph by Antonia and William Kennedy Dickson, considered the first book of history on film, is published.
  1896
The first building dedicated exclusively to showing motion pictures was the Vitascope Hall, established on Canal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana, on June 26 — it was converted from a vacant store.
Later that year on October 19, the Edisonia Hall opened in Buffalo, New York in the Ellicott Square Building. The Edisonia was the first known dedicated, purpose-built motion picture theater in the world.
Alice Guy-Blaché, the first female film director makes La Fée aux Choux (The Cabbage Fairy) acknowledged as the first narrative fiction film. This movie also introduces screenplays for the first time.
In The Kiss, May Irwin and John Rice re-enact the kiss from the New York stage hit The Widow Jones, the first film of a couple kissing.[15]
The House of the Devil, the first horror film.
Le Coucher de la Mariée, a French erotic short film considered to be one of the first erotic films made. The film was first screened in Paris in November 1896, within a year of the first public screening of a projected motion picture.
  1898
Walking Troubles of Organic Hemiplegy was the first documentary film in the world, created by Romanian neurologist Gheorghe Marinescu. The film depicts several patients affected by debilitating neurological diseases walking before and after treatment.
 1899
The first example of object manipulation and stop-motion animation was the short film by Albert E. Smith and J. Stuart Blackton called The Humpty Dumpty Circus.
King John is the first film adaptation of the work of William Shakespeare. The film features Herbert Beerbohm Tree in the title role and features the death scene from King John.
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anahanbee · 4 years
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Roundhay Garden Scene, também conhecido como Le Prince Motion Picture No. 1, é um filme mudo britânico de curta-metragem com apenas dois segundos de duração, dirigido pelo inventor francês Louis Le Prince em 1888. É considerado um dos mais antigos filmes da história ainda sobrevivente. Nele aparecem membros da família do diretor: seu filho Adolphe Le Prince, a sogra Sarah Whitley e o sogro Joseph Whitley, além de outra moça chamada Harriet Hartley, no jardim de uma casa, andando e rindo. Vale observar que Sarah anda de trás para a frente, e uma parte da roupa de Joseph está voando.
De acordo com Adolphe Le Prince, as filmagens ocorreram em Oakwood Grange, propriedade de Joseph e Sarah Whitley, em Oakwood, subúrbio de Leeds, West Yorkshire, Inglaterra, no dia 14 de outubro de 1888.
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tigerhvac · 2 years
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Tiger HVAC
A privately owned Australian business, Tiger HVAC Solutions forms part of its parent company Tiger Electrical Solutions PTY LTD. Operating in all areas across NSW our company maintains and works to the highest standards, we are an quality accredited company and are endorsed with accreditations in ISO9001 Quality management Systems, ISO 14001 Environmental Management system and ISO45001 OHS management system.
Website: https://www.tigerhvac.com.au/
Address : 16/151 Hartley Road, Smeaton Grange, NSW 2567,AU
Phone Number: 0246050494
Contact Email ID: [email protected]
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emotoothtiger · 3 years
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[60 fps] The oldest recorded video, “Roundhay Garden Scene”, England,1888
This is technically very interesting but not explicit in detail. It really is rather good work and the dude has done some search curiously noting the subsequent mysterious deaths of some of the participants.
It is filmed at Oakwood Grange, Roundhay, Leeds on Oct 14th, 1888.  I wonder if it was part of Roundhay Park where mega acts play. I got caught in the traffic there one time I was passing through Leeds. Bloody Hell it were jammed! The Grange was demolished and turned into houses in 1972.
The cameraman is Louis le Prince and the young bloke in the film is his son, Adolphe. The older lady is Louis’ mother in law Sarah Whitley who died on the 24th of Oct, and the man is her husband, Joseph Whitley. The other lady is Annie Hartley, a family friend
Apparently Louis, the cameraman, vanished in 1891 on a train in France. The camera was his invention.
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Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust sells Australian property for A$90.5m
Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust sells Australian property for A$90.5m
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Tue, Jul 03, 2018 – 9:47 PM
THE manager of Frasers Logistics & Industrial Trust (FLT) on Tuesday said that it has sold a property in Australia for A$ 90.5 million (S$ 90.5 million) through its trustee.
The property on 80 Hartley Street, Smeaton Grange is located in New South Wales, Australia, and comprises a cross-dock, regional distribution facility with a high clearance warehouse, office…
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news4trafford · 4 years
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Take a trip back in time revisiting one of the best decades for entertainment.
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The 80’s made pop stars sparkle more than the Premier League footballers do. millions tuned into the chart show on a Sunday evening on BBC Radio 1, it wasn’t just music though that made the decade so memorable.
If you were a kid growing up in the 80s you were one lucky individual, with Grange Hill, Jossies Giants, Playschool, Worzel Gummidge, and so many cartoon type programming that has never been beaten.
Adults were also catered for, Tales from the Crypt, Hammer House of Horror, Magnum PI, Chips, LoveBoat, Spitting Image, Six Million Dollar Man, Wonder Woman, and more!
It was music though that gave the decade the memorable star status, people like Paul Young, Howard Jones, Madonna, and big named bands like Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Wham!, Tears for Fears, Depeche Mode, Level 42, Human League and many others fighting to get to number one on a Sunday evening.
If you were an editor of a music magazine some with gigantic posters of your favourite star you be doing well, Smash Hits and Number being the most popular.
People bought records not only because the music was great, or they were a fan of the band or individual singer but because they wanted a say in how their favourite record would do as every record bought counted to the figures that week.
Radio broadcasts were big during that decade, Timmy Mallett on Key 103 gave lots of entertainment before bed, he had a battle of the band’s competition, fans of a band or a singer would most often treat them like we do football teams, Human League v Depeche Mode who would win?
Football, of course, was always well supported, however, it did not have that star appeal, nothing shined other than the Busby Babes, and we will all remember how stuffy Liverpool was back then! often they would get a goal from several rebounds including off the ref!
Film stars have always had that bit of sparkle and so was the same in the ’80s with Eddie Murphy rising to fame in Beverly Hills Cop, Kelly le Brock in Weird Science, Gremlins was a classic film for all the family.
In the ’80s sportswear brands were rising in popularity, who remembers All Sports? they were the biggest name on the high street, Trafford had one store in Stretford Arndale (now called Stretford Mall) we think though the store most people will remember is the one on Barlow Moor Road in nearby Chorlton.
They were not cheap back then even though money was tighter than even these days! jobs did not pay that well and people just managed to scrape through, so it was a bit of a shock to people who wanted to be seen as ‘trendy’ when they saw a very cheaply made Adidas or Nike cotton t-shirt for £49.99! these same t-shirts today can be bought for as little as £10
For those, though growing up in the ’80s maybe in secondary school we think you will agree how lucky you were to have seen and been part of the greatest decade of our times.
Take a trip back in time re-visiting an unrivalled decade of entertainment for all the family Take a trip back in time revisiting one of the best decades for entertainment. The 80's made pop stars sparkle more than the Premier League footballers do.
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mybookishwords · 7 years
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Book Review Picture
My book review picture for Hartley's Grange by Nicole Hurley-Moore is out right now.
My book review for Hartley’s Grange by Nicole Hurley-Moore is out right now!
Scroll down to the next post and you will find it. I hope you like it. This is a great Aussie Romance book. Enjoy!
♥ GWAP
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torentialtribute · 5 years
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SPORTS AGENDA: Trouble brewed from the start for Paul Scholes at Oldham
More details have emerged that make you wonder how Paul Scholes even lasted 31 days as manager of Oldham Athletic.
A spokesperson for the club has admitted.
A club spokesperson admitted a problem with the generator meant that the water & # 39; lukewarm & # 39; while it was & # 39; second-hand & # 39; coffee maker actually broke.
At his first press conference, Scholes joked that he would go and get coffee unless the machine seized & # 39; was understandably unimpressed when his joke became a reality
Paul Scholes stopped Oldham after 31 days of claims of owner interference only 31 days in charge due to owner interference "
Paul Scholes retired from Oldham after only 31 days of owner interference
Ole is a cheerleader for women
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer & # 39; s interest in the progress of the Manchester United ladies team was another striking aspect of his time back in Old Trafford, comfortably collecting everything superlative Jose Mourinho.
Solskjaer, overheard of the female game during a recent coaching course, has good reasons to stay up to date, and his wife, Silje, 44, was such a miracle young player that the two of them ended up in the same youth training sessions, at the Norwegian Clausengen Club, where the United manager started his career.
Karna van Solskjaer, 15, is also a talented prospect. While continuing her education in Norway, she spent time in a regional training center near Manchester. & # 39; Ole knows the ladies game & # 39 ;, women manager Casey Stoney told Sports Agenda. During his return to Old Trafford, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has shown an interest in women's football. "
During his return to Old Trafford, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer expressed interest in women's football."
became interested in women's football
Grange out of reach despite Prince & # 39; s Trust
The Duke of Cambridge, no less, said last September that England & # 39; a better team & # 39; was with dr. Pippa Grange on board added a speech: & Gareth Southgate knew that the English team psychologist … could be the key to transforming our World Cup squadron.
But Sports Agenda can show that Grange & # 39; s involvement with seniors the squadron had already stopped last fall and that she has not been part of a camp in England since last summer's tournament in Russia.
The Wales Football League at Hensol Castle
formerly the Glamorgan County Asylum, had a few entertaining moments last week. Compere Gabby Logan asked Gareth Bale what he was most looking forward to when he returned to play for Wales.
& # 39; Being with Wayne, & # 39; he grinned backwards. Bale and Wayne Hennessey enjoy a special bromance, mainly about golf. John Toshack was also in a good mood when he received a lifetime achievement award the day before his 70th birthday.
] Teammates Gareth Bale and Wayne Hennessey enjoy a special bromance, mainly about golf "
Teammates Gareth Bale and Wayne Hennessey enjoy a special bromance,
Asked how he would celebrate, Toshack replied with a smile: Morning, afternoon or night
The absurd way in which owners of Miami Open, management giant IMG, allocate wildcards as favors to their own customers was emphasized this week by the cause of world No. 1 Osaka, the sister of Mari, [1]. 9459003]
The 23-year-old older brother of brother Osaka is on the ranking of 334 in the world and won only $ 58,000 in prize money for the career, but got privileged access to the main prize, despite that she lost her two this season and is struggling with a shoulder injury.
She lost quite a 6-2, 6-4 to another wildcard, the 16-year-old Whitney Osuigwe, 205, and became emotional during the press conference that followed.
It is, of course, a complete coincidence that talented sister Naomi – who represents Japan – is on his way to becoming one of IMG & # 39; s most profitable tennis customers in the company's history
Mari Osaka is on the list of 334 in the world but got access to the Miami Open headquartered 334 in the world, but got access to the main exhibition Miami Open "
Mari Osaka is ranked 334 in the world but gained access to the Miami Open main draw
There was a lot of support for Tamara Taylor, the winner of the 2014 World Cup that won 115 rugby union caps in England at the launch of its testimonial this week.
Taylor hopes to raise £ 100,000 for various charities in what is considered the first witnesses is for a female rugby player.
Dylan Hartley, Mike Tindall, Martin Bayfield and Jason Leonard were among those who attended the launch night at Smith & Wollensky restaurant at the Strand in London. BBC and Sky Sports in July Netball World Cup in Liverpool.
Both broadcasters will show the tournament and the synergy will even extend to the sharing of a number of experts and presenters, such as the desire to reach as many houses as possible.
England is very engaging to do well, given the success of the silk coached by Tracey Neville during last year's Commonwealth Games
<img id = "i-c9e5f0e1e60a5dac" src = "https://ift.tt/2TXKJ7R" height = " 438 "width =" 634 "alt =" England has great preference for the well under Tracey Neville in the Netball World Cup of July well under Tracey Neville in Netbal World Cup of July "
England is very tempted to do well under Tracey Neville in the Netball World Championship in July
Promised chief executive of the Professional Footballers & Association, Gordon Taylor, will ask questions to Manchester Stage keeper Alex Stepney during the & # 39; Legends Lunch & # 39; at Lancashire Cricket Foundation at Old Trafford on Monday, May 20.
] For £ 40 you can enjoy a two-course meal and try to ask Taylor, the best-paid official union in the world, about the & # 39; full and open assessment & # 39; that the PFA undergoes, or the Charity Commission commission, on how his £ 2.2 million salary is funded.
Bargain.
Gordon Taylor, the world's best-paid trade union official, will speak in the handsome bash "class =" blkBorder img-share "Taylor Taylor, the highest paid union officer in the world, speaks in the fancy bash "
the world, speaks in the fancy bash
It is clear that Nick Dougherty winks has been given to lead Augusta's Sky Sports & Masters coverage this year.
The former European Tour player, 36, faced Sarah Stirk to replace David Livingstone, who bowed after 23 years last September.
However, the lead presenter is selected on an event basis, so Stirk still has a chance to lead Sky coverage in future tournaments.
Nick Dougherty (right) has understood to have the nod to Sky Sports & Masters coverage & # 39;
(right) is supposed to have a nod to Sky Sports & # 39; Masters coverage & # 39;
Nick Dougherty (right) has understood the nod to
Contributors to the sports diary: Matt Lawton, Mike Dickson, Laurie Whitwell, Laura Lambert, Ian Herbert and Kieran Gill [
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pmclorn11 · 5 years
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Presa, La Pryor, La Puerta, Laredo, Laredo Ranchettes, Larga Vista, La Rosita, Lasana, Lasara, Las Colonias, Las Lomas, Las Lomitas, Las Palmas-Juarez, Las Quintas Fronterizas, Latexo, Laughlin AFB, Laureles, La Vernia, La Victoria, La Villa, Lavon, La Ward, Lawn, League City, Leakey, Leander, Leary, Lefors, Leona, Leonard, Leon Valley, Leroy, Levelland, Lewisville, Lexington, Liberty, Liberty City, Liberty Hill, Lincoln Park, Lindale, Linden, Lindsay, Lindsay, Lipan, Lipscomb, Little Elm, Littlefield, Little River-Academy, Live Oak, Liverpool, Livingston, Llano, Llano Grande, Lockhart, Lockney, Log Cabin, Lolita, Loma Linda East, Lometa, Lone Oak, Lone Star, Longview, Lopeno, Lopezville, Loraine, Lorena, Lorenzo, Los Alvarez, Los Angeles Subdivision, Los Ebanos, Los Fresnos, Los Indios, Lost Creek, Los Villareales, Los Ybanez, Lott, Louise, Lovelady, Lowry Crossing, Lozano, Lubbock, Lucas, Lueders, Lufkin, Luling, Lumberton, Lyford, Lyford South, Lytle, Mabank, McAllen, McCamey, McGregor, McKinney, McLean, McLendon-Chisholm, McQueeney, Madisonville, Magnolia, Malakoff, Malone, Manor, Mansfield, Manvel, Marathon, Marble Falls, Marfa, Marietta, Marion, Markham, Marlin, Marquez, Marshall, Marshall Creek, Mart, Martindale, Mason, Matador, Mathis, Maud, Mauriceville, Maypearl, Meadow, Meadowlakes, Meadows Place, Medina, Megargel, Melissa, Melvin, Memphis, Menard, Mercedes, Meridian, Merkel, Mertens, Mertzon, Mesquite, Mexia, Miami, Midland, Midlothian, Midway, Midway North, Midway South, Mila Doce, Milam, Milano, Mildred, Miles, Milford, Miller’s Cove, Millican, Millsap, Mineola, Mineral Wells, Mingus, Mirando City, Mission, Mission Bend, Missouri City, Mobeetie, Mobile City, Monahans, Mont Belvieu, Monte Alto, Montgomery, Moody, Moore, Moore Station, Morales-Sanchez, Moran, Morgan, Morgan Farm Area, Morgan’s Point, Morgan’s Point Resort, Morning Glory, Morse, Morton, Moulton, Mountain City, Mount Calm, Mount Enterprise, Mount Pleasant, Mount Vernon, Muenster, Muleshoe, Mullin, Munday, Muniz, Murchison, Murphy, Mustang, Mustang Ridge, Nacogdoches, Naples, Nash, Nassau Bay, Natalia, Navarro, Navasota, Nazareth, Nederland, Needville, Nesbitt, Nevada, Newark, New Berlin, New Boston, New Braunfels, Newcastle, New Chapel Hill, New Deal, New Fairview, New Falcon, New Home, New Hope, New London, New Summerfield, New Territory, Newton, New Waverly, Neylandville, Niederwald, Nixon, Nocona, Nolanville, Nome, Noonday, Nordheim, Normangee, Normanna, North Alamo, North Cleveland, Northcliff, North Escobares, Northlake, North Pearsall, North Richland Hills, North San Pedro, Novice, Nurillo, Oak Grove, Oakhurst, Oak Leaf, Oak Point, Oak Ridge town (Cooke County), Oak Ridge town (Kaufman County), Oak Ridge North, Oak Trail Shores, Oak Valley, Oakwood, O’Brien, Odem, Odessa, O’Donnell, Oglesby, Oilton, Old River-Winfree, Olivarez, Olmito, Olmos Park, Olney, Olton, Omaha, Onalaska, Onion Creek, Opdyke West, Orange, Orange Grove, Orchard, Ore City, Overton, Ovilla, Owl Ranch-Amargosa, Oyster Creek, Ozona, Paducah, Paint Rock, Palacios, Palestine, Palisades village, Palmer, Palmhurst, Palm Valley, Palmview, Palmview South, Pampa, Panhandle, Panorama Village, Pantego, Paradise, Paris, Parker, Pasadena, Pattison, Patton Village, Pawnee, Payne Springs, Pearland, Pearsall, Pecan Acres, Pecan Gap, Pecan Grove, Pecan Hill, Pecan Plantation, Pecos, Pelican Bay, Penelope, Penitas, Pernitas Point village, Perryton, Petersburg, Petrolia, Petronila, Pettus, Pflugerville, Pharr, Pilot Point, Pine Forest, Pinehurst, Pinehurst, Pine Island, Pineland, Pinewood Estates, Piney Point Village, Pittsburg, Plains, Plainview, Plano, Pleak village, Pleasanton, Pleasant Valley, Plum Grove, Point, Point Blank, Point Comfort, Ponder, Port Aransas, Port Arthur, Porter Heights, Port Isabel, Portland, Port Lavaca, Port Mansfield, Port Neches, Post, Post Oak Bend City, Poteet, Poth, Potosi, Pottsboro, Powell, Poynor, Prado Verde, Prairie View, Premont, Presidio, Primera, Princeton, Progreso, Progreso Lakes, Prosper, Putnam, Pyote, Quail, Quanah, Queen City, Quemado, Quinlan, Quintana, Quitaque, Quitman, Radar Base, Ralls, Ranchette Estates, Ranchitos Las Lomas, Rancho Alegre, Rancho Banquete, Rancho Chico, Ranchos Penitas West, Rancho Viejo, Ranger, Rangerville village, Rankin, Ransom Canyon, Ratamosa, Ravenna, Raymondville, Realitos, Redford, Red Lick, Red Oak, Redwater, Redwood, Reese Center, Refugio, Reid Hope King, Reklaw, Relampago, Rendon, Reno city (Lamar County), Reno city (Parker County), Retreat, Rhome, Rice, Richardson, Richland, Richland Hills, Richland Springs, Richmond, Richwood, Riesel, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande City, Rio Hondo, Rio Vista, Rising Star, River Oaks, Riverside, Roanoke, Roaring Springs, Robert Lee, Robinson, Robstown, Roby, Rochester, Rockdale, Rockport, Rocksprings, Rockwall, Rocky Mound, Rogers, Rollingwood, Roma, Roma Creek, Roman Forest, Ropesville, Roscoe, Rosebud, Rose City, Rose Hill Acres, Rosenberg, Rosita North, Rosita South, Ross, Rosser village, Rotan, Round Mountain, Round Rock, Round Top, Rowlett, Roxton, Royse City, Rule, Runaway Bay, Runge, Rusk, Sabinal, Sachse, Sadler, Saginaw, St. Hedwig, St. Jo, St. Paul, St. Paul, Salado, Salineno, Samnorwood, San Angelo, San Antonio, San Augustine, San Benito, San Carlos, Sanctuary, Sanderson, Sandia, San Diego, Sandy Hollow-Escondidas, San Elizario, San Felipe, Sanford, Sanger, San Ignacio, San Isidro, San Juan, San Leanna village, San Leon, San Manuel-Linn, San Marcos, San Patricio, San Pedro, San Perlita, San Saba, Sansom Park, Santa Anna, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Santa Fe, Santa Maria, Santa Monica, Santa Rosa, Savoy, Scenic Oaks, Schertz, Schulenburg, Scissors, Scotland, Scottsville, Seabrook, Seadrift, Seagoville, Seagraves, Sealy, Sebastian, Seguin, Selma, Seminole, Serenada, Seth Ward, Seven Oaks, Seven Points, Seymour, Shady Hollow, Shady Shores, Shallowater, Shamrock, Shavano Park, Sheldon, Shenandoah, Shepherd, Sherman, Shiner, Shoreacres, Sienna Plantation, Sierra Blanca, Siesta Shores, Silsbee, Silverton, Simonton, Sinton, Skellytown, Skidmore, Slaton, Smiley, Smithville, Smyer, Snook, Snyder, Socorro, Solis, Somerset, Somerville, Sonora, Sour Lake, South Alamo, South Fork Estates, South Houston, Southlake, Southmayd, South Mountain, South Padre Island, South Point, Southside Place, South Toledo Bend, Spade, Sparks, Spearman, Splendora, Spofford, Spring, Spring Garden-Terra Verde, Springlake, Springtown, Spring Valley, Spur, Stafford, Stagecoach, Stamford, Stanton, Star Harbor, Stephenville, Sterling City, Stinnett, Stockdale, Stonewall, Stowell, Stratford, Strawn, Streetman, Study Butte-Terlingua, Sudan, Sugar Land, Sullivan City, Sulphur Springs, Sundown, Sunnyvale, Sunray, Sunrise Beach Village, Sunset, Sunset Valley, Sun Valley, Surfside Beach, Sweeny, Sweetwater, Taft, Taft Southwest, Tahoka, Talco, Talty, Tatum, Taylor, Taylor Lake Village, Teague, Tehuacana, Temple, Tenaha, Terrell, Terrell Hills, Texarkana, Texas City, Texhoma, Texline, The Colony, The Hills village, The Woodlands, Thompsons, Thorndale, Thornton, Thorntonville, Thrall, Three Rivers, Throckmorton, Tierra Bonita, Tierra Grande, Tiki Island village, Timbercreek Canyon village, Timberwood Park, Timpson, Tioga, Tira, Toco, Todd Mission, Tolar, Tomball, Tom Bean, Tool, Tornillo, Toyah, Tradewinds, Trent, Trenton, Trinidad, Trinity, Trophy Club, Troup, Troy, Tuleta, Tulia, Tulsita, Turkey, Tuscola, Tye, Tyler, Tynan, Uhland, Uncertain, Union Grove, Universal City, University Park, Utopia, Uvalde, Uvalde Estates, Valentine, Valley Mills, Valley View, Val Verde Park, Van, Van Alstyne, Vanderbilt, Van Horn, Van Vleck, Vega, Venus, Vernon, Victoria, Vidor, Villa del Sol, Villa Pancho, Villa Verde, Vinton village, Waco, Waelder, Wake Village, Waller, Wallis, Walnut Springs, Warren City, Waskom, Watauga, Waxahachie, Weatherford, Webster, Weimar, Weinert, Weir, Wellington, Wellman, Wells, Wells Branch, Weslaco, West, Westbrook, West Columbia, Westdale, Westlake, West Lake Hills, West Livingston, Westminster, West Odessa, Weston, West Orange, Westover Hills, West Pearsall, West Sharyland, West Tawakoni, West University Place, Westway, Westworth Village, Wharton, Wheeler, White Deer, Whiteface, Whitehouse, White Oak, Whitesboro, White Settlement, Whitewright, Whitney, Wichita Falls, Wickett, Wild Peach Village, Willamar, Willis, Willow Park, Wills Point, Wilmer, Wilson, Wimberley, Windcrest, Windemere, Windom, Windthorst, Winfield, Wink, Winnie, Winnsboro, Winona, Winters, Wixon Valley, Wolfe City, Wolfforth, Woodbranch, Woodcreek, Woodloch, Woodsboro, Woodson, Woodville, Woodway, Wortham, Wyldwood, Wylie, Yantis, Yoakum, Yorktown, Yznaga, Zapata, Zapata Ranch, Zavalla, Zuehl.
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mondecinema2 · 6 years
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✦ Roundhay Garden Scene ✦ ✦ Une scène au jardin de Roundhay ✦
► Documentaire ( d’après SensCritique ) ► Essai ( d’après Wikipedia) de: Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince ( Louis Le Prince )
► 1888 ‧Noir et blanc/Cinéma indépendant ‧ Muet ‧ 0 min ► Considéré comme le premier film répertorié de l'histoire.
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► Avec: Adolphe Le Prince, Joseph Whitley, Harriet Hartley et Sarah Whitley. 
📽 Le film met en scène quatre personnes se promenant dans un jardin : Adolphe ♂ (le fils de Louis Le Prince), Sarah Whitley♀, Joseph Whitley ♂ et Harriet Hartley ♀
La scène se déroule dans la propriété d'Oakwood Grange appartenant à Joseph et Sarah Whitley, à Roundhay, un faubourg de la ville de Leeds en Angleterre.
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williamemcknight · 7 years
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Hartley Botanic showcases classic plantings at Tatton Park
At RHS Tatton Park Flower Show this year, Hartley Botanic’s beautiful, handmade (and RHS recommended) greenhouses and glasshouses are framed by romantic, orderly plantings evocative of grand stately gardens and estates. The Lancashire-based manufacturer’s tradestand has been designed and built by landscape and garden maintenance company Base Squared who took inspiration for the external plantings on the stand from Tatton Park itself, and from the gardens of large family homes surrounding the Italian lakes.
As well as fitting in seamlessly with the backdrop of Tatton Park, the beautiful theme provides a distinct gardening style which joins three equally individual planting schemes within the greenhouses themselves; including an edible display, a colourful bedding plant design and a tropical ‘hot house’ collection. The distinct themes are all unified by a single objective, to inspire current and potential greenhouse owners about the growing potential afforded by this most expansive of gardening tools, which can be tailored to personal gardening styles or planting passions.
The Hartley Botanic tradestand features five handmade greenhouses and glasshouses with an external planting scheme designed to reflect a structured, formal garden. Topiary specimens and carpinus betulus fastigiata gives structural definition to the overall scheme infilled with lower symmetrical planting (including lavender, hydrangea and roses.)
Dressed to reflect a greenhouse enjoyed by a potential foodie and edible grower, the Hartley Planthouse features a mix of salads, herbs, tomatoes, fruits and vegetables. The scheme includes plants at different stages of development and offers a snapshot of a working, practical greenhouse.
The Hartley Botanic Grange glasshouse on the tradestand features a colourful display of bedding plants, including geraniums, gazanias and begonias. The look is both vibrant and focused, suggesting a greenhouse owner with a passion for growing bedding plants to dress, not only their home, but also their glasshouse with varieties trailing artistically over staging and shelving (petunias and lobelias.)
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mybookishwords · 7 years
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Book Review - Hartley's Grange
Book Review - Hartley's Grange by Nicole Hurley-Moore. A great classic Aussie Romance Story
Hartley’s Grange / Nicole Hurley-Moore / Arena Books / 2016 / ISBN 9781760295059 / 300 Pages / Fiction
Purchase Link
  Book Blurb –
In one short day Lily Beckett’s life falls apart when she loses her dream job in fashion and finds out her boyfriend is having an affair. Totally devastated, she ends the relationship and flees the city. (more…)
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williamemcknight · 7 years
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Hartley Botanic at RHS Hampton Court
Hartley Botanic’s tradestand at this year’s RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show, which has been awarded five stars, showcases key elements of the Lancashire-based manufacturer’s 79 years of greenhouse design heritage, built on the quality and longevity of its handmade products and originally inspired by Victorian engineering. The stand features a vintage greenhouse built around 70 years ago, and still in full working order, and a Victorian hothouse planting scheme – referencing an era which was a key inspirer for Vincent Hartley and the birth of the first solely glass and aluminium greenhouse by the inventor and businessman. The tradestand, which also features edible plantings and an arid external garden, has been designed by Longview Design and built by The Outdoor Room, with plants sourced by Burford Garden Company.
  A vintage 1950s V&N Hartley Ltd Semi-dodekagon 9 greenhouse on the Hartley Botanic stand
The 1950s Semi-dodekagon 9 greenhouse on the Hartley Botanic stand, bearing the original V&N Hartley Ltd logo, was found in a customer’s garden in Northampton in full working order after being installed and reassembled numerous times over a 70 year period. The greenhouse is a physical example of Hartley Botanic’s founding ambition to create ‘the finest greenhouses money can buy,’ structures which are truly built to last. It is just one of many Hartley Botanic original structures which are still standing such as the Hartley Botanic greenhouse at Belgrave Hall installed in 1950 and the glasshouse in Glasgow Botanical Gardens installed in 1988. The longevity of Hartley Botanic’s greenhouses and glasshouses is testament to the quality of the company’s British craftsmanship and its commitment to the finest materials, it is also one of the reasons why it became the RHS’ recommended aluminium greenhouse and glasshouse supplier in February. From the stainless-steel capping screws and durable polyester coated finish, to its extruded aluminium alloy sections, each element of a Hartley Botanic greenhouse speaks of a commitment to enduring strength and performance.
  The vintage Semi-dodekagon 9 greenhouse with pastel-coloured hydrangeas
The greenhouse also celebrates the unrivalled engineering design which set the company apart in 1938 and still informs its structures today. One of V&N Hartley’s original models, the Semi-dodekagon showcases engineering design which can still be seen in Hartley Botanic’s modern greenhouses, including self-supporting frames to maximise internal light and space and no glass to glass or metal contact (proprietary to the company). The design is also a Hartley classic and can be clearly seen in the company’s Highgrow and Wisley models.
The historic greenhouse on its RHS Hampton Court stand marks Hartley Botanic’s new 30 year lifetime guarantee which covers both the structure and installation of its greenhouses and glasshouses, a formal acknowledgement for customers of the reality of their longevity.
  Tropical and subtropical species dominate as the lead planting scheme on the stand
  Tropical and subtropical species dominate as the lead planting scheme on the stand, filling both a handmade Victorian Villa glasshouse and Hartley Planthouse 8. Both structures are dressed with architectural, large-foliage and exotic looking houseplants including orchids, palms and airplants. The planting scheme has been inspired by the Victorian era, both in terms of their use of glasshouses as hothouses and their passion for exotic plant collecting. Garden historian Twigs Way commented; “During the Victorian era, greenhouses were used as a means to showcase and maintain an exotic plant collection. Orchids were extremely fashionable and hunters were sent out to bring back ‘the world in your greenhouse’. The focus was on the most tropical of plants and it was connected to status, especially as it was often wealthy individuals who recruited plant hunters to expand their collections.” Using a greenhouse or glasshouse for Victorian-style exotic collecting is also seeing a resurgence amongst British gardeners. Burford Garden Company has experienced a 300 percent 5 year rise in sales of tropical plants and succulents as consumers become more daring in terms of what they can grow and maintain.
  The Victorian era was also an important precursor and inspirer for Vincent Hartley’s first solely glass and aluminium greenhouse. Hartley’s strong but lightweight aluminium design was a much-needed departure from its Victorian wood and wrought iron counterparts. The emphasis on sound and intelligent engineering design was also inspired by important Victorian figures such as engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and architect Sir Joseph Paxton.
Also on the Hartley Botanic Hampton Court stand is a handmade Grange greenhouse filled with edibles and a handmade Grow & Store greenhouse dressed as a practical, outdoor storage room.
Tom Barry, managing director of Hartley Botanic commented: “We wanted our stand at RHS Hampton Court to communicate something of Hartley Botanic’s almost 80 year old company pedigree. The engineering genius of its structures, inspired by the Victorians, and its enduring commitment to Vincent Hartley’s founding principles of the very finest craftsmanship means the Lancashire business is still flourishing and growing. It also means that, in a throwaway age, Hartley Botanic’s greenhouses and glasshouses do truly stand the test of time, allowing generations of families to enjoy the latest gardening trends – whether exotic plant collecting or grow your own.”
Longview Design, The Outdoor Room and Burford Garden Company were chosen by Hartley Botanic as both RHS Hampton Court and RHS Chelsea Flower Show partners this year due to each company’s commitment to market-leading quality in both their product sourcing and design work.
All Hartley Botanic’s greenhouses and glasshouses are made to order. Customers interested in purchasing a Hartley Botanic greenhouse should visit: https://www.hartley-botanic.co.uk or call 01457 819 155 for more information.
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williamemcknight · 7 years
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Hartley Botanic overcomes torrential rain at RHS Chatsworth to win second 5 star tradestand award of the year
Hartley Botanic, the RHS’ recommended aluminium greenhouse and glasshouse supplier, has today been awarded a 5 star tradestand award for its exhibit at RHS Chatsworth Flower Show, despite the heavy wind and rain which challenged the stand’s build and led to the showground being completely closed yesterday – marking only the second time in 13 years an RHS Flower Show has been compromised by inclement weather.
The Lancashire manufacturer and its design partner, landscape and garden maintenance company Base Squared, battled the elements (and a couple of ducks!) to create a stand which delivers a comforting dose of greenhouse gardening nostalgia.
The stand features 5 of Hartley Botanic’s beautiful, handmade greenhouses and glasshouses (including a vintage structure from the 1950s) planted with key, historic greenhouse gardening themes including timeless ‘grow your own’ and Victorian plant collecting, all unified with a classic English cottage garden feel. The award follows Hartley Botanic’s 5 star tradestand award at RHS Chelsea Flower Show last week.
Timeless ‘Grow Your Own’
A white Hartley Botanic Victorian Villa glasshouse with external cold frames is rammed full of different types of edible plants including tomatoes, salad leaves, peas, broad beans, cucumbers, peppers, chillies as well as citrus fruits. The look and feel is of a functional ‘working’ greenhouse with plants at various stages of growth. This is very much in line with how greenhouses or allotments would have been used in the 1950s and is still a hugely popular way to use a greenhouse by gardeners today.
The Hartley Botanic stand also features a greenhouse designed and built by the company in the 1950s and still in excellent working order. The historic greenhouse adds to the stand’s vintage, nostalgic theme but also illustrates the quality and longevity of a Hartley Botanic structure, one of the reasons why it is the manufacturer of choice for many of the UK’s leading horticultural institutions. The historic greenhouse marks Hartley Botanic’s new 30 year lifetime guarantee which covers both the structure and installation of its greenhouses and glasshouses, a formal acknowledgement for customers of the reality of their longevity.
Victorian plant collecting
A Hartley Planthouse and Grange greenhouse both evoke the golden age of plant hunting, filled with the dramatic and exotic species which would have been top of the list for Victorian plant collectors. The white Planthouse is styled as a tropical, Victorian hot house with a focus on fresh green and variegated plants which include palms, acer, fatsia and japonica.
A white Hartley Botanic Grange greenhouse also references a Victorian passion for sourcing and showcasing plant species from around the world and features a whole host of exotics including passion flower, callistemon (bottle brush plant) strelizia reginae and summer jasmine. The deep greens of the tropical foliage is complimented with the pastel tones of some classic summer bedding plants, including violets, dahlias and hostas.
Traditional, English cottage garden external plantings
Each of the greenhouses on show sit within plantings reminiscent of a traditional, English cottage garden in sympathy to the look and style of Chatsworth House. Relaxed, country-style plants combine with locally sourced stones in colour tones sympathetic with the house itself.
Hartley Botanic’s Grow & Store
As well as its 3 themed greenhouses and historic structure, the Hartley Botanic tradestand also features its practical Grow & Store greenhouse model – a compact horticultural structure perfect for smaller gardens with a versatile storage shed.
Tom Barry, Managing Director of Hartley Botanic commented: “We are thrilled about our second 5 star tradestand award this year! As well as making their gardening dreams a practical reality, owning a Hartley Botanic greenhouse or glasshouse adds a real, nostalgic warmth to our customers’ lives. Customers often remember enjoying a greenhouse or glasshouse with their parents or grandparents, and as the longevity of our 1950s model shows, they will likely be able to pass this down to their own children or grandchildren. Our greenhouses, particularly those in the more classic styles, also remind some customers of a romantic, bygone era when gardening was an even greater part of everyday living and perhaps more treasured as a pastime. There is a palpable charm about owning a greenhouse or glasshouse and we wanted to capitalise on this through our nostalgic stand.”
Thomas Hearn, director at Base Squared added: “We wanted to create an overall concept for the greenhouse display which would help potential customers to visualise how they could look and be used in their own gardens. As well as being nostalgic, the individual plantings and themes (eg: tropical hot house) should be inspirers for keen gardeners. It was also important to us that the stand blended sympathetically into the beautiful Chatsworth House setting. As well as the colour tones of the stones used we also used reclaimed bricks for the greenhouse structures in mellow tones to blend well with the plantings and backdrop.”
Base Squared were chosen by Hartley Botanic as their RHS Chatsworth and Tatton Park partner this year due to their award-winning RHS show credentials and their commitment to good quality materials, eye for detail and understanding of what will appeal to RHS members.
  All Hartley Botanic’s greenhouses and glasshouses are made to order. Customers interested in purchasing a Hartley Botanic greenhouse should visit: https://www.hartley-botanic.co.uk or call 01457 819 155 for more information.
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williamemcknight · 7 years
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Hartley Botanic’s RHS Chelsea trade stand to reflect consumer plant trends
RHS-recommended aluminium greenhouse and glasshouse manufacturer Hartley Botanic has revealed the inspiration behind the planting themes to be showcased on its trade stand at RHS Chelsea Flower Show this year – a celebration of the plants most popular with consumers and gardeners alike.
The trade stand, which at 200m2 is one of the largest, will feature five handmade greenhouses and glasshouses, four of which will be filled with unique themes which mirror current growing trends. The stand which has been designed by Longview Design, will be built by The Outdoor Room with plants sourced by Burford Garden Company will also demonstrate the huge variety of ways Hartley Botanic greenhouses are now used by the modern gardener.
Hartley Botanic and Longview Design reveal their planting choices and Burford Garden Company uncovers the purchasing trends behind them.
1. Hartley Botanic Victorian Grand Lodge glasshouse – dressed in trendy tropical plants, succulents and large foliage houseplants
Hartley Botanic’s Victorian Grand Lodge will be the largest glasshouse featured on the stand and will feature the plant trend which has seen the most dramatic rise in interest over the last few years. The glasshouse will be dressed with architectural and impressive looking tropical and subtropical species in response to a boom in demand for tropical plants and succulents amongst consumers and gardeners alike. Airplants, palms, bananas and the exotic Gloriosa vine will compliment the lodge’s beautiful proportions and Stephanotis will provide a wonderful scent.
TREND: The planting theme of the Victorian Grand Lodge reflects a dramatic 300% five-year rise in the sales of tropical plants, succulents, cacti and airplants, and the most recent and currently significant trend for large foliage exotic-looking houseplants, think the 1970s – Ficus Lyrata, Cheese plants etc. There are well documented health benefits to having these types of houseplants in the home and office too. All these types will be represented on the stand.
  2. Hartley Botanic Grange greenhouse – to reflect a renewed commitment to edible growing
Hartley Botanic’s Grange greenhouse will be full of brightly coloured peppers, aubergines and chillies to reflect gardeners’ renewed commitment to growing their own fresh fruit and vegetables. Growing their own fresh produce also remains one of the most popular ways Hartley Botanic customers use their greenhouses.
TREND: The ‘Grow Your Own’ trend has been around for a while but it seems there has been a renewed interest in edible growing this year with a 25% uplift in related sales. While some customers have stuck to growing their own fresh produce as a way of life, supermarket food shortages at the start of the year may have given others new impetus.
  3. Hartley Botanic Westminster greenhouse – herb planting suggesting a burgeoning area
Herbs will feature as a key element in Hartley Botanic’s Westminster greenhouse, including Mediterranean style herbs which are becoming increasingly popular with consumers and can be easily grown in a greenhouse and as our climate becomes warmer. The Westminster greenhouse will also suggest a continuing interest in enjoying our gardens ‘al fresco’ and will be dressed with beautiful garden furniture.
TREND: Herb plant sales have increase by 18% year on year and they seem to be particularly trendy and in demand at the moment – perhaps in part due to them being advocated by TV chefs.
  4. Hartley Botanic Opus glasshouse – filled with orchids in homage to our most popular houseplant
A contemporary bronze Opus glasshouse will be dedicated entirely to showcasing orchids in celebration of the fact that they remain our most popular category of houseplant. Planting will feature the Paphiopedilum slipper orchid as well as the South American Zygopetalum and Masdevallia species. Orchids within the glasshouse will be individually ‘exhibited,’ presenting them as individual works of horticultural art.
TREND: Houseplants have grown enormously over the last five years and orchids remain the most popular species type in the category, with a 25% uplift in sales over the last year. Phalaenopsis, which will feature largely in the Hartley Botanic Opus glasshouse, is now the most in demand houseplant in the country.
  In addition to the four trend-themed greenhouses, the stand will also feature a Hartley Botanic Grow and Store greenhouse, a compact horticultural structure perfect for smaller gardens with a versatile storage shed.
Tom Barry, managing director of Hartley Botanic commented: “We wanted the plantings on our trade stand to reflect the plants and themes that are most popular for modern greenhouse owners and also to suggest the diverse ways in which greenhouses are actually used. A greenhouse can of course be an extremely practical tool providing fresh fruit and vegetables all year round but can also provide a way to indulge a very specific plant collecting passion – whether orchids or air plants. Owning a greenhouse or glasshouse really opens up growing potential in terms of what is possible and, with many of Chelsea’s most impressive plants grown ‘under glass,’ it is the perfect place for gardeners to get inspired.”
Glen Sheldrake, horticulture director at Burford Garden Company added: “Plantings on Hartley Botanic’s trade stand provide a good overview of the gardening and plant trends which have exploded over the last few years and those like ‘grow your own’ which show renewed demand. The tropical plants featured in the Victorian Grand Manor and the orchids in the Opus represent the most dramatic new growth areas – over the last five years we have experienced a 300% increase in demand with interest continuing well into the last year.”
  Burford Garden Company, Longview Design and The Outdoor Room were chosen by Hartley Botanic as RHS Chelsea Flower Show partners this year due to each company’s commitment to market-leading quality in both their product sourcing and design work.
Find Hartley Botanic at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show on trade stand number 31.
All Hartley Botanic’s greenhouses and glasshouses are made to order. Customers interested in purchasing a Hartley Botanic greenhouse should visit: https://www.hartley-botanic.co.uk or call 01457 819 155 for more information.
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