NOTES: This copy image is from the collection of John Brandon-Jones, architect (1908-1999), who had worked with the partnership of Charles Cowles-Voysey from 1933.
NOTES: Earlshall is a 16th tower house builit for the Bruces of Earlshall, begun in 1546 and completed in 1617. It was restored in the 1890s by Robert Lorimer, who also laid out the walled garden. See RIBA161388 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: Earlshall is a 16th tower house builit for the Bruces of Earlshall, begun in 1546 and completed in 1617. It was restored in the 1890s by Robert Lorimer, who also laid out the walled garden. See RIBA161390 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: Earlshall is a 16th tower house builit for the Bruces of Earlshall, begun in 1546 and completed in 1617. It was restored in the 1890s by Robert Lorimer, who also laid out the walled garden. See RIBA161397 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: Earlshall is a 16th tower house builit for the Bruces of Earlshall, begun in 1546 and completed in 1617. It was restored in the 1890s by Robert Lorimer, who also laid out the walled garden.
NOTES: Earlshall is a 16th tower house builit for the Bruces of Earlshall, begun in 1546 and completed in 1617. It was restored in the 1890s by Robert Lorimer, who also laid out the walled garden. See RIBA161400 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: The house dates back to the 17th century but was extensively remodelled in the 18th and 19th centuries. But the house is famous for its gardens. First landscaped in the 1750s by the then owner Coplestone Warre Bampfylde, a landscape designer and amateur painter. Then in 1904, Lutyens with Jekyll responsible for the planting created one of his largest single garden designs, creating a series of paved terraces, raised walks and water features and a grand Orangery of 1906-1908. See RIBA161591 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: The gardens at Hidcote Manor (a late 17th century building, refaced in the 18th century with 20th century additions) were laid out between 1907 and 1930 by the garden designer Lawrence Johnston, whose mother had acquired the estate in 1907. See RIBA161445 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: The gardens at Hidcote Manor (a late 17th century building, refaced in the 18th century with 20th century additions) were laid out between 1907 and 1930 by the garden designer Lawrence Johnsone, whose mother had acquired the estate in 1907.
NOTES: The gardens at Hidcote Manor (a late 17th century building, refaced in the 18th century with 20th century additions) were laid out between 1907 and 1930 by the garden designer Lawrence Johnston, whose mother had acquired the estate in 1907. See RIBA161447 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: The gardens at Hidcote Manor (a late 17th century building, refaced in the 18th century with 20th century additions) were laid out between 1907 and 1930 by the garden designer Lawrence Johnston, whose mother had acquired the estate in 1907. See RIBA161449 for a colour version of this image.
NOTES: Rodmarton Manor was begun in 1909 by Ernest Barnsley, completed in 1926 under his brother Sydney's supervision and then by Norman Jewson who completed the chapel to the house in 1929. The gardens were designed in 1909 by Ernest Barnsley as a series of 'outdoor rooms'. Notable elements include the walled Long Garden and the Wild Garden, situated to the north-west of the house. See RIBA161620 for a colour version of this image.