Saturday, May 31, 2008

Moroso - Sofa Pixel

Graduado no Royal College of Art, Cristian Zuzunaga desenvolveu um tecido, baseado no conceito do pixel. Produzido por uma empresa alemã, o tecido é comercializado pela Moroso. Tem tudo para se tornar um best-seller.
A Moroso é sem duvida uma marca importante em "peças" de design Italiano.
Encomende já / Order Now:
geral@4udecor.com
Telf: 214 867 378
Tlm: 966 312 602
Cascais / Portugal

Residential & model home staging


Take the uncertainty of the sale on your property!

Today, the competitiveness of the property market has intensified the need for genuine Home Staging and Merchandising model that reflects the latest trends, desires and needs of buyers. We know that the market - the first time buyer, empty-Nester, baby boomers, move up or move down, the pattern is clear to us and we design for your target audience so that emotionally connects the buyer to create internal realize their dreams and lifestyles desired.

Home Signature Designs offers this trend-setting service throughout the Tampa Bay area and surrounding communities. Getting a jump on your competitors today. Find out how we can help! Home Builders & Investors> Home Owners>

Residential & model home staging


Take the uncertainty of the sale on your property!

Today, the competitiveness of the property market has intensified the need for genuine Home Staging and Merchandising model that reflects the latest trends, desires and needs of buyers. We know that the market - the first time buyer, empty-Nester, baby boomers, move up or move down, the pattern is clear to us and we design for your target audience so that emotionally connects the buyer to create internal realize their dreams and lifestyles desired.

Home Signature Designs offers this trend-setting service throughout the Tampa Bay area and surrounding communities. Getting a jump on your competitors today. Find out how we can help! Home Builders & Investors> Home Owners>

Residential & model home staging


Take the uncertainty of the sale on your property!

Today, the competitiveness of the property market has intensified the need for genuine Home Staging and Merchandising model that reflects the latest trends, desires and needs of buyers. We know that the market - the first time buyer, empty-Nester, baby boomers, move up or move down, the pattern is clear to us and we design for your target audience so that emotionally connects the buyer to create internal realize their dreams and lifestyles desired.

Home Signature Designs offers this trend-setting service throughout the Tampa Bay area and surrounding communities. Getting a jump on your competitors today. Find out how we can help! Home Builders & Investors> Home Owners>

chair for elegant


you can see the art is beautiful made

chair for elegant


you can see the art is beautiful made

chair for elegant


you can see the art is beautiful made

Texas Interior Designer


Texas Interior Designer
Dallas Austin Houston Interior Design
.: Winning ASID Interior Design and Residential by Maureen Miller. This "Texas Room" Pecky cypress and stone floors gives owners concentrate Texas roots.
With a wide range of styles of interior design and experience, Miller Manor Homes offers its customers the expertise necessary to create a family environment that suits their lifestyle and their aesthetic sensibility.
ASID Texas art in action
Austin home builder> Texas ASID Interior Designer> Interior Designer Houston Dallas
Austin home builder> American society Interior Designer ASID Texas> Texas Custom Home Builder> Interior Designer Dallas Austin Houston> Miller Manor Homes
Southern Living Magazine
Builder Magazine architect

Texas ASID Interior Designer
Texas Custom Home Builder
American Society ASID Interior Designer prices
Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes> More
Contact Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes

Anchored IVI
in the classical traditions while embracing the contemporary sophistication, we ...
Integrating IVI
the design of buildings, housing construction and interior design as an entity, creating one-stop reliability in all residential design and construction process.
IVI impeccable
crafts, professional planning and execution of building design, interior design, construction and provide our customers an experience of total quality.
MMH ..... . i
Texas ASID interior designer
+ Professional
Members ASID
+ NCIDQ certified
+ Texas registered interior designer


Maureen Miller Miller Manor Homes, a 2003 Texas ASID Gold award-winning Texas Interior Designer, brings more than a quarter-century of Interior Design and Custom Building Design expertise for each project.

Texas Interior Designer, Maureen Miller, ASID. From conception to completion, your needs are assessed and appropriate design solutions are compiled introduced, and installed. Miller Manor Homes. Austin. Dallas. Houston interior design. And the south-west of Interior Design.

De Interior Design and Residential Design & Construction Projects, Miller Manor Homes were presented to 7 questions of Southern Living Magazine, and have received numerous accolades, including the ASID Gold Award for the president's Maureen Miller Designing a custom three-story Caribbean remains complex with landscaping. Maureen ASID awarded the coveted Gold Award and two Silver Awards, one of whom is his project Interior Design in Austin, Texas River Place "The Overlook". A.S.I.D. Maureen has also awarded the Gold Award for home development model for this year "The court in St. Anthony Place," a residential development of high-end country french-called court houses in Louisiana.


:.
Texas process ASID interior designer
I CONCEPT
I CREATION
I COMPLETION
Sitemap I Home I Interior Design, I Custom Home Design Design Awards IIA About Us I Contact Us

Texas Interior Designer


Texas Interior Designer
Dallas Austin Houston Interior Design
.: Winning ASID Interior Design and Residential by Maureen Miller. This "Texas Room" Pecky cypress and stone floors gives owners concentrate Texas roots.
With a wide range of styles of interior design and experience, Miller Manor Homes offers its customers the expertise necessary to create a family environment that suits their lifestyle and their aesthetic sensibility.
ASID Texas art in action
Austin home builder> Texas ASID Interior Designer> Interior Designer Houston Dallas
Austin home builder> American society Interior Designer ASID Texas> Texas Custom Home Builder> Interior Designer Dallas Austin Houston> Miller Manor Homes
Southern Living Magazine
Builder Magazine architect

Texas ASID Interior Designer
Texas Custom Home Builder
American Society ASID Interior Designer prices
Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes> More
Contact Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes

Anchored IVI
in the classical traditions while embracing the contemporary sophistication, we ...
Integrating IVI
the design of buildings, housing construction and interior design as an entity, creating one-stop reliability in all residential design and construction process.
IVI impeccable
crafts, professional planning and execution of building design, interior design, construction and provide our customers an experience of total quality.
MMH ..... . i
Texas ASID interior designer
+ Professional
Members ASID
+ NCIDQ certified
+ Texas registered interior designer


Maureen Miller Miller Manor Homes, a 2003 Texas ASID Gold award-winning Texas Interior Designer, brings more than a quarter-century of Interior Design and Custom Building Design expertise for each project.

Texas Interior Designer, Maureen Miller, ASID. From conception to completion, your needs are assessed and appropriate design solutions are compiled introduced, and installed. Miller Manor Homes. Austin. Dallas. Houston interior design. And the south-west of Interior Design.

De Interior Design and Residential Design & Construction Projects, Miller Manor Homes were presented to 7 questions of Southern Living Magazine, and have received numerous accolades, including the ASID Gold Award for the president's Maureen Miller Designing a custom three-story Caribbean remains complex with landscaping. Maureen ASID awarded the coveted Gold Award and two Silver Awards, one of whom is his project Interior Design in Austin, Texas River Place "The Overlook". A.S.I.D. Maureen has also awarded the Gold Award for home development model for this year "The court in St. Anthony Place," a residential development of high-end country french-called court houses in Louisiana.


:.
Texas process ASID interior designer
I CONCEPT
I CREATION
I COMPLETION
Sitemap I Home I Interior Design, I Custom Home Design Design Awards IIA About Us I Contact Us

Texas Interior Designer


Texas Interior Designer
Dallas Austin Houston Interior Design
.: Winning ASID Interior Design and Residential by Maureen Miller. This "Texas Room" Pecky cypress and stone floors gives owners concentrate Texas roots.
With a wide range of styles of interior design and experience, Miller Manor Homes offers its customers the expertise necessary to create a family environment that suits their lifestyle and their aesthetic sensibility.
ASID Texas art in action
Austin home builder> Texas ASID Interior Designer> Interior Designer Houston Dallas
Austin home builder> American society Interior Designer ASID Texas> Texas Custom Home Builder> Interior Designer Dallas Austin Houston> Miller Manor Homes
Southern Living Magazine
Builder Magazine architect

Texas ASID Interior Designer
Texas Custom Home Builder
American Society ASID Interior Designer prices
Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes> More
Contact Austin home builder Miller Manor Homes

Anchored IVI
in the classical traditions while embracing the contemporary sophistication, we ...
Integrating IVI
the design of buildings, housing construction and interior design as an entity, creating one-stop reliability in all residential design and construction process.
IVI impeccable
crafts, professional planning and execution of building design, interior design, construction and provide our customers an experience of total quality.
MMH ..... . i
Texas ASID interior designer
+ Professional
Members ASID
+ NCIDQ certified
+ Texas registered interior designer


Maureen Miller Miller Manor Homes, a 2003 Texas ASID Gold award-winning Texas Interior Designer, brings more than a quarter-century of Interior Design and Custom Building Design expertise for each project.

Texas Interior Designer, Maureen Miller, ASID. From conception to completion, your needs are assessed and appropriate design solutions are compiled introduced, and installed. Miller Manor Homes. Austin. Dallas. Houston interior design. And the south-west of Interior Design.

De Interior Design and Residential Design & Construction Projects, Miller Manor Homes were presented to 7 questions of Southern Living Magazine, and have received numerous accolades, including the ASID Gold Award for the president's Maureen Miller Designing a custom three-story Caribbean remains complex with landscaping. Maureen ASID awarded the coveted Gold Award and two Silver Awards, one of whom is his project Interior Design in Austin, Texas River Place "The Overlook". A.S.I.D. Maureen has also awarded the Gold Award for home development model for this year "The court in St. Anthony Place," a residential development of high-end country french-called court houses in Louisiana.


:.
Texas process ASID interior designer
I CONCEPT
I CREATION
I COMPLETION
Sitemap I Home I Interior Design, I Custom Home Design Design Awards IIA About Us I Contact Us
Não Decoramos apenas Casas Grandes e Espaçosas.
Temos Soluções para Todos os Casos.
Somos Criativos e Inovadores.
Teste-nos / try 4udecor
geral@4udecor.com
Telf: 214 867 378
Tlm: 966 312 602
Cascais / Portugal

Friday, May 30, 2008

photo update maybe


: : I think this weekend it might happen. I have the whole weekend to myself to work on the apartment, and I might just find the camera and be able to put together a small photo collage of our new place.

I think this room divider is cool. I apologize, I can no longer remember where I found it.

photo update maybe


: : I think this weekend it might happen. I have the whole weekend to myself to work on the apartment, and I might just find the camera and be able to put together a small photo collage of our new place.

I think this room divider is cool. I apologize, I can no longer remember where I found it.

photo update maybe


: : I think this weekend it might happen. I have the whole weekend to myself to work on the apartment, and I might just find the camera and be able to put together a small photo collage of our new place.

I think this room divider is cool. I apologize, I can no longer remember where I found it.

nonchalant mom


: : domino mag has been a constant source of inspiration for me lately. and I just received the new issue in the mail!! I found this article about .carina schott. , owner of nonchalant mom [via decor8]. it reminds me of home somehow, maybe it's the forest setting, the black facade with a red door, the simplicity of the house....I don't know, but there's a very scandinavian feel about it. I love how the house is built in two parts. the house just seems to have a really good balance of function and aesthetics. some day....maybe we'll find a house like this.

view more photos here


nonchalant mom


: : domino mag has been a constant source of inspiration for me lately. and I just received the new issue in the mail!! I found this article about .carina schott. , owner of nonchalant mom [via decor8]. it reminds me of home somehow, maybe it's the forest setting, the black facade with a red door, the simplicity of the house....I don't know, but there's a very scandinavian feel about it. I love how the house is built in two parts. the house just seems to have a really good balance of function and aesthetics. some day....maybe we'll find a house like this.

view more photos here


nonchalant mom


: : domino mag has been a constant source of inspiration for me lately. and I just received the new issue in the mail!! I found this article about .carina schott. , owner of nonchalant mom [via decor8]. it reminds me of home somehow, maybe it's the forest setting, the black facade with a red door, the simplicity of the house....I don't know, but there's a very scandinavian feel about it. I love how the house is built in two parts. the house just seems to have a really good balance of function and aesthetics. some day....maybe we'll find a house like this.

view more photos here


Thursday, May 29, 2008

Exposição - Le Corbusier, Arte e Arquitectura, Museu Colecção Berardo, Lisboa

19 de Março - 17 de Agosto
Le Corbusier ( 1887 -1965 ) Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris, mais conhecido como Le Corbusier foi um arquiteto francês de origem suíça considerado um dos mais importantes arquitetos do século XX. Suas obras e ideias estão espalhadas pelo mundo.
Temos todas as peças de Le Corbusier.
Encomende Já
Telf: 214 867 378
Cascais

community gardeners tend

Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

In Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and correctional officer in the corner, I look for everything the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are accustomed to having fresh produce," says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard to a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not just one or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the PA Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond the improvement of a package in city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in the "healing workshops" on drug rehabilitation and other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago .

Finally has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh produce, and Food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need.

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. This is a good deed and a good cause," he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in the half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or tickets parking.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and enrich the soil off - season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese.

These May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are.

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

The prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything," said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

For the moment, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
English

"
French

Translate
Suggest a better translation
Thank you for contributing your translation suggestion to Google Translate.
We'll use your suggestion to improve translation quality in future updates to our system. Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and officer correction in the corner, I look for all the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are used d & # 39; have fresh produce, "says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard at a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not only a or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond l & # 39; improvement of a parcel in the city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in workshops on healing the drug and rehabilitation of other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago. Finally

has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, ' affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh products, and food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need .

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. It is a good deed and a good cause, "he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or parking tickets.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and d & # 39; enrich the soil off-season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese. These

May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are .

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

Prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything, "said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

Currently, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
French

»
English

Translate

community gardeners tend

Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

In Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and correctional officer in the corner, I look for everything the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are accustomed to having fresh produce," says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard to a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not just one or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the PA Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond the improvement of a package in city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in the "healing workshops" on drug rehabilitation and other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago .

Finally has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh produce, and Food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need.

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. This is a good deed and a good cause," he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in the half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or tickets parking.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and enrich the soil off - season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese.

These May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are.

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

The prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything," said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

For the moment, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
English

"
French

Translate
Suggest a better translation
Thank you for contributing your translation suggestion to Google Translate.
We'll use your suggestion to improve translation quality in future updates to our system. Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and officer correction in the corner, I look for all the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are used d & # 39; have fresh produce, "says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard at a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not only a or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond l & # 39; improvement of a parcel in the city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in workshops on healing the drug and rehabilitation of other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago. Finally

has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, ' affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh products, and food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need .

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. It is a good deed and a good cause, "he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or parking tickets.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and d & # 39; enrich the soil off-season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese. These

May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are .

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

Prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything, "said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

Currently, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
French

»
English

Translate

community gardeners tend

Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

In Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and correctional officer in the corner, I look for everything the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are accustomed to having fresh produce," says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard to a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not just one or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the PA Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond the improvement of a package in city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in the "healing workshops" on drug rehabilitation and other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago .

Finally has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh produce, and Food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need.

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. This is a good deed and a good cause," he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in the half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or tickets parking.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and enrich the soil off - season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese.

These May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are.

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

The prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything," said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

For the moment, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
English

"
French

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We'll use your suggestion to improve translation quality in future updates to our system. Gardening for food, rehabilitation
City provides seed harvest; community gardeners tend; products goes to the needy.

Ginny Smith
Nicholas Rowan, a 22-year-old from Mayfair, is for violation of probation time. He does not want to tell the world about his first crime, and inside the greenhouse on grounds Philadelphia prison system in the north-east, it does not really matter.

It is coaxing tiny tomato plants on a little peat pots biggest called "six pack", and had it not been for his orange jumpsuit and officer correction in the corner, I look for all the world like any other gardener in the spring.

"We must be very mild," says Rowan, slowly lifting potted plants in another.

This week, under an innovative program called City Harvest, tomato transplants and thousands of other fruits, vegetables and herbal plants should be delivered to 30 community gardens around Philadelphia. There, they will be planted and maintained, the product harvested and finally returned to 30 food cupboards in local churches, community centers and high-and low-income apartment complex.

Last year, gardeners given 12000 pounds - six tons. This year, given rising food prices and increasingly necessary, they are in sight for 15000 pounds.

"We are all really just the idea of getting fresh vegetables to people who need food, especially a large number of elderly who are used d & # 39; have fresh produce, "says Don Nilsen of Powelton Village. Last year, he and four others in the summer of Winter Garden near the Drexel University delivered 237 pounds of greens, tomatoes, eggplants and peppers in a food cupboard at a church nearby.

Now in its third season, City Harvest is distinguished from other prison, community gardening, food distribution and nutrition education programs across the country insofar as it involves not only a or two of these elements, but all four.

"For us, there was enormous power in this idea," says Priscilla Luce, president of the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation, which provided $ 500000 in grants to see the program in 2009. It is managed by Philadelphia Green, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's urban gardening initiative.

The idea came at the same time on several fronts.

First, in the late 1990, supporting foundations began in Philadelphia green insisting that his community gardens generate "greater aesthetic value beyond l & # 39; improvement of a parcel in the city, "said Joan M. Reilly, Philadelphia Green chief.

Several achievements followed: gardeners who were already informally share their abundant harvests, that gardening is increasingly used in workshops on healing the drug and rehabilitation of other institutions, and that rates for conditions such as obesity and diabetes are rising.

At the same time, the prison system was looking to revive its horticulture program, dormant since an electrical fire destroyed two-era Victorian greenhouses to the road on a complex ten years ago. Finally

has come more and more advocacy for "food security," the notion that all households, regardless of their income, should have access to sufficient increased safety, ' affordable and nutritious food.

Steveanna Wynn, executive director of SHARE non-profit, sees it this way: "In some areas of our city, there is no food stores. Corner stores are not fresh products, and food is so expensive these days, people can 't afford it anyway. It is a way to get fresh produce in the diet of people who otherwise would not get everything literally. "

SHARE, which stands for Self-Help and Resource Exchange, coordinates the distribution of the City of harvest produce to food cupboards. The Council for the Promotion of Health PA South provides placards with recipes and nutritional information on products are distributed.

Because of the weak economy, Wynn believes that more people will never shared this year's harvest. "It is ugly, and I fear that it will be uglier," she said.

Rowan feels good to know that the Sun and New Golden Girl tomatoes, jalapeno and habanero peppers, basil and oregano he tended eventually help people in need .

"We feed the homeless and people in shelters. It is a good deed and a good cause, "he said.

Rowan is one of about 12 men and 10 women prisoners who work - in separate groups - inside the greenhouse or outside the prison in half-acre organic garden. They are low-security prisoners, most service from 30 to 90 days for offences such as violation of probation or parole, drug use, or non-payment of child support or parking tickets.

Lisa Mosca, an instructor City Harvest, teaching them not only how to grow plants organically, but how to plan the next growing season, the fight against pests through planting sage, and d & # 39; enrich the soil off-season. It also launches in some basic math, resume writing and cooking.

"We cultivate and cook our vegetables here, too," Mosca said, pointing to the hoop adjacent house.

It helps.

"There is no charge things in prison," says Rowan, whose favorite dish is sauteed broccoli with cheese. These

May not sound like earth-life lessons, but correctional officer Tom O'Neal, who began prison at the beginning of the gardening program and now manages the greenhouse, insists they are .

"Life has not been targeted for these people," said O'Neal. "They learn on the propagation of plants, soil structure, a little botany, yes, but also on the work ethic and expand horizons."

Prisoners are fascinated by the symbiotic relationships that exist in nature, for example. "They love that aphids are enslaved by the ants. We tell them everything, "said O'Neal, who grew up on a dairy farm in Bradford County, Pa.

And if the season take place in a place full of people obsessed with the passage of time. Rowan now knows the time of sowing and transplantation, when to plant, water and harvest.

More importantly, he knows he could be out of here soon. Maybe it will even make gardening and cooking when he gets home.

Currently, there are the tomatoes to move from one pot to another.

"You can really get lost here," he said.

Contact gardening writer Virginia Smith at 215-854-5720 or vsmith@phillynews.com.
French

»
English

Translate

Florida Luxury House Plan


Details print comprehensive plan
Larger image and other details of the plan W33518EB.

Order of the Plan QuikQuote

Amend the plan questions?


Award Winning Plan luxury house
Plan no: W33518EB
Style: Florida, Mediterranean, luxury
Total Area: 5,110 sq. m. pi
Main floor.: 4,585 sq.m. pi 2nd Floor: 525 square metres pi
Garage Attachés: 3 cars, 822 sq ft.
Other Unfinished area: 588 square feet
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms complete: 4 half-Bathrooms: 1
Width: 84 'Depth: 129' 8 "
Ridge Maximum height: 32'6 "
The exterior walls: Choice of Block, 2x4, 2x6
Foundations: Slab
Click here to see the prices and options

Florida Luxury House Plan


Details print comprehensive plan
Larger image and other details of the plan W33518EB.

Order of the Plan QuikQuote

Amend the plan questions?


Award Winning Plan luxury house
Plan no: W33518EB
Style: Florida, Mediterranean, luxury
Total Area: 5,110 sq. m. pi
Main floor.: 4,585 sq.m. pi 2nd Floor: 525 square metres pi
Garage Attachés: 3 cars, 822 sq ft.
Other Unfinished area: 588 square feet
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms complete: 4 half-Bathrooms: 1
Width: 84 'Depth: 129' 8 "
Ridge Maximum height: 32'6 "
The exterior walls: Choice of Block, 2x4, 2x6
Foundations: Slab
Click here to see the prices and options

Florida Luxury House Plan


Details print comprehensive plan
Larger image and other details of the plan W33518EB.

Order of the Plan QuikQuote

Amend the plan questions?


Award Winning Plan luxury house
Plan no: W33518EB
Style: Florida, Mediterranean, luxury
Total Area: 5,110 sq. m. pi
Main floor.: 4,585 sq.m. pi 2nd Floor: 525 square metres pi
Garage Attachés: 3 cars, 822 sq ft.
Other Unfinished area: 588 square feet
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms complete: 4 half-Bathrooms: 1
Width: 84 'Depth: 129' 8 "
Ridge Maximum height: 32'6 "
The exterior walls: Choice of Block, 2x4, 2x6
Foundations: Slab
Click here to see the prices and options

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime


Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime

Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime


Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime

Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime


Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh

Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime

Caption:
This fabulous, one of
-- A kind of Mediterranean-style house is well suited not only the client, but this lot and it is restrictive setbacks. It has more than 4,200 sf. CVC of space, with an additional 900 pc. bridges outside. It is in
"plantation" on the island of St. George and should be completed sometimes
this winter. Click HERE to see many more examples of my work.


Build your own house - the thrill of a lifetime. But before the first movement of a hammer is heard, organizing your ideas, dreams and preferences, aligned with your lifestyle and budget, a complete set of building plans viable, requires the assistance of an experienced designer home. We can see the possibilities, find solutions and to anticipate your needs - even if you have difficulty expressing them. By clicking on each link at the top and those of the right column will give you a brief overview of how we work and most of the answers to all your questions.




• • HOME

• • About Me

• • CONTACT ME

• • CONDITIONS














Rural lots for sale
in Western PA Counties:
Building a lot to Beaver, Butler, Clarion Mercer counties or at the following address:
www.beautifulh
Tem que Fazer Obras em Casa?
Não sabe quem é que o pode Ajudar?
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Cascais / Portugal

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Victorian house




Style Guide: Victorian house, at home in Maine

The pared down inside the renovated Victorian charm embodies the quiet seaside living.


To lighten and brighten the outside of this 1886 Victorian house, its owners replaced its dark green aluminum siding with untreated cedar shingles and rebuilt a stern older who have undermined the spirit of housing architecture. Inside, they removed the model wallpapers, alleging carpet to expose the wood floors, and chose painting sunny and comfortable to create an unfussy, streamlined look that suits the house of coastal location.

Come inside and see how an authentic old house has been updated in a modern style with bright colors and simple decoration scheme.

Living Room


"It was the first room we discussed," said the owner of the living room. From working with designer Patricia O'Shaughnessy, they stripped of its wallpaper, installed a bead-board ceiling, and painted the floor a brilliant blue to achieve the crisp, fresh look they wanted. They opted for a mixture of furniture fabrics pale - damask for the camelback sofa, heavy cotton for the adaptation of chairs and slipcover on the back rounded love - seat.

A club president, who had been included in home sales has been rejuvenated by a strong striped slipcover. Surrounded by a golden frame, billowy cumulous clouds rendered in oil by Connecticut artist Ralph Feyl strengthen the calming effect of the room colors. The stars are used as decorative elements inside.

Kitchen


Even if it is in an old house, the kitchen has an elegant, modern thanks to smooth surfaces and a range which is limited to white with touches of yellow and blue. Located at the rear of the house, the newly reconstructed kitchen has pine floors, cabinets tailor, a ceramic and tile backsplash with a diamond pattern contrasts border.

In front of colored glass cabinets display dishes, and the center island makes commodious triple duty office, cooktop, and grill.

Dining


"We bought the house in east - with books, paintings and furniture," says the owner. "We have issued a number of things, but we kept as much as we could." The dining room at the turn of the century, table and chairs are just a few questions that the couple chose to keep.

Fresh picked sweet peas, cosmos, hydrangeas and add color to the table together with flashing pink-decorated cups. A variety of taste treats await the hour of tea in the afternoon. Fishing pale walls are nicely complemented by the beautiful water.

Bedroom


The couple has four converted in close rooms, a master suite consisting of a bedroom, bathroom and dressing room. Taking its cue from the seaside the dressing is animated by cockleshell screen graphic. A vintage photograph, a frosted glass vase full of Queen Anne's lace, and a box of tea discovered in a drawer are displayed on the desktop solid.

In vinegar-pine floors, white walls and a ceiling painted periwinkle Pale create a sense of expansiveness and calm in the main room, as viewed through the door. The canopy bed was built from salvaged wood topped with a porch in the South.

Bathroom


The colors of the ocean and sky are reflected in the tranquil bathroom. Beaded board was used to create a storage space along the wall behind the sink pedestal. Grouped on the corniche are silver-plated Mint Julep cups.

A dish engraved soap and a clay jar filled with hydrangeas sit behind the sink. The various green and blue light in the room are tied together in the simple woven carpets.

Exterior


Pink asters, larkspur, black-eyed Susans and sunflowers dominant colors reflect the inner rooms, flowering and along a path that leads to the beach. The pale, untreated cedar shingles that cover the house replaced dark green aluminum siding. Pots of annuals line the steps leading to the grass.

Owners can take their meals outside here and enjoy the vast views Maine. Inside, the decoration of the house of relaxation to take account of all colors outside of nature that surrounds it.

Victorian house




Style Guide: Victorian house, at home in Maine

The pared down inside the renovated Victorian charm embodies the quiet seaside living.


To lighten and brighten the outside of this 1886 Victorian house, its owners replaced its dark green aluminum siding with untreated cedar shingles and rebuilt a stern older who have undermined the spirit of housing architecture. Inside, they removed the model wallpapers, alleging carpet to expose the wood floors, and chose painting sunny and comfortable to create an unfussy, streamlined look that suits the house of coastal location.

Come inside and see how an authentic old house has been updated in a modern style with bright colors and simple decoration scheme.

Living Room


"It was the first room we discussed," said the owner of the living room. From working with designer Patricia O'Shaughnessy, they stripped of its wallpaper, installed a bead-board ceiling, and painted the floor a brilliant blue to achieve the crisp, fresh look they wanted. They opted for a mixture of furniture fabrics pale - damask for the camelback sofa, heavy cotton for the adaptation of chairs and slipcover on the back rounded love - seat.

A club president, who had been included in home sales has been rejuvenated by a strong striped slipcover. Surrounded by a golden frame, billowy cumulous clouds rendered in oil by Connecticut artist Ralph Feyl strengthen the calming effect of the room colors. The stars are used as decorative elements inside.

Kitchen


Even if it is in an old house, the kitchen has an elegant, modern thanks to smooth surfaces and a range which is limited to white with touches of yellow and blue. Located at the rear of the house, the newly reconstructed kitchen has pine floors, cabinets tailor, a ceramic and tile backsplash with a diamond pattern contrasts border.

In front of colored glass cabinets display dishes, and the center island makes commodious triple duty office, cooktop, and grill.

Dining


"We bought the house in east - with books, paintings and furniture," says the owner. "We have issued a number of things, but we kept as much as we could." The dining room at the turn of the century, table and chairs are just a few questions that the couple chose to keep.

Fresh picked sweet peas, cosmos, hydrangeas and add color to the table together with flashing pink-decorated cups. A variety of taste treats await the hour of tea in the afternoon. Fishing pale walls are nicely complemented by the beautiful water.

Bedroom


The couple has four converted in close rooms, a master suite consisting of a bedroom, bathroom and dressing room. Taking its cue from the seaside the dressing is animated by cockleshell screen graphic. A vintage photograph, a frosted glass vase full of Queen Anne's lace, and a box of tea discovered in a drawer are displayed on the desktop solid.

In vinegar-pine floors, white walls and a ceiling painted periwinkle Pale create a sense of expansiveness and calm in the main room, as viewed through the door. The canopy bed was built from salvaged wood topped with a porch in the South.

Bathroom


The colors of the ocean and sky are reflected in the tranquil bathroom. Beaded board was used to create a storage space along the wall behind the sink pedestal. Grouped on the corniche are silver-plated Mint Julep cups.

A dish engraved soap and a clay jar filled with hydrangeas sit behind the sink. The various green and blue light in the room are tied together in the simple woven carpets.

Exterior


Pink asters, larkspur, black-eyed Susans and sunflowers dominant colors reflect the inner rooms, flowering and along a path that leads to the beach. The pale, untreated cedar shingles that cover the house replaced dark green aluminum siding. Pots of annuals line the steps leading to the grass.

Owners can take their meals outside here and enjoy the vast views Maine. Inside, the decoration of the house of relaxation to take account of all colors outside of nature that surrounds it.

Victorian house




Style Guide: Victorian house, at home in Maine

The pared down inside the renovated Victorian charm embodies the quiet seaside living.


To lighten and brighten the outside of this 1886 Victorian house, its owners replaced its dark green aluminum siding with untreated cedar shingles and rebuilt a stern older who have undermined the spirit of housing architecture. Inside, they removed the model wallpapers, alleging carpet to expose the wood floors, and chose painting sunny and comfortable to create an unfussy, streamlined look that suits the house of coastal location.

Come inside and see how an authentic old house has been updated in a modern style with bright colors and simple decoration scheme.

Living Room


"It was the first room we discussed," said the owner of the living room. From working with designer Patricia O'Shaughnessy, they stripped of its wallpaper, installed a bead-board ceiling, and painted the floor a brilliant blue to achieve the crisp, fresh look they wanted. They opted for a mixture of furniture fabrics pale - damask for the camelback sofa, heavy cotton for the adaptation of chairs and slipcover on the back rounded love - seat.

A club president, who had been included in home sales has been rejuvenated by a strong striped slipcover. Surrounded by a golden frame, billowy cumulous clouds rendered in oil by Connecticut artist Ralph Feyl strengthen the calming effect of the room colors. The stars are used as decorative elements inside.

Kitchen


Even if it is in an old house, the kitchen has an elegant, modern thanks to smooth surfaces and a range which is limited to white with touches of yellow and blue. Located at the rear of the house, the newly reconstructed kitchen has pine floors, cabinets tailor, a ceramic and tile backsplash with a diamond pattern contrasts border.

In front of colored glass cabinets display dishes, and the center island makes commodious triple duty office, cooktop, and grill.

Dining


"We bought the house in east - with books, paintings and furniture," says the owner. "We have issued a number of things, but we kept as much as we could." The dining room at the turn of the century, table and chairs are just a few questions that the couple chose to keep.

Fresh picked sweet peas, cosmos, hydrangeas and add color to the table together with flashing pink-decorated cups. A variety of taste treats await the hour of tea in the afternoon. Fishing pale walls are nicely complemented by the beautiful water.

Bedroom


The couple has four converted in close rooms, a master suite consisting of a bedroom, bathroom and dressing room. Taking its cue from the seaside the dressing is animated by cockleshell screen graphic. A vintage photograph, a frosted glass vase full of Queen Anne's lace, and a box of tea discovered in a drawer are displayed on the desktop solid.

In vinegar-pine floors, white walls and a ceiling painted periwinkle Pale create a sense of expansiveness and calm in the main room, as viewed through the door. The canopy bed was built from salvaged wood topped with a porch in the South.

Bathroom


The colors of the ocean and sky are reflected in the tranquil bathroom. Beaded board was used to create a storage space along the wall behind the sink pedestal. Grouped on the corniche are silver-plated Mint Julep cups.

A dish engraved soap and a clay jar filled with hydrangeas sit behind the sink. The various green and blue light in the room are tied together in the simple woven carpets.

Exterior


Pink asters, larkspur, black-eyed Susans and sunflowers dominant colors reflect the inner rooms, flowering and along a path that leads to the beach. The pale, untreated cedar shingles that cover the house replaced dark green aluminum siding. Pots of annuals line the steps leading to the grass.

Owners can take their meals outside here and enjoy the vast views Maine. Inside, the decoration of the house of relaxation to take account of all colors outside of nature that surrounds it.