Saturday Evening

My how time flies. I'm sitting here at L street (that's what I call where I live) with many of my windows open listening to the rustling of the night leaves while I type by the light of a small bankers lamp. The July breeze moves in and out of the window and I love to feel it on my skin.

I just got back from a walk around the Avenues. It was lightly raining with ominous clouds overhead. I LOVE the Avenues. If there's anywhere I belong in the state of Utah, it's the Aves. And L street is the first place that has felt like home since I left home 14 years ago. I will always want to be here.

While I was walking in the Aves

While I was walking in the Aves

I have been watching pledges come in for my Go Fund Me campaign this evening - the campaign that will send me off on an adventure beyond what I could have ever hoped for! For many weeks (months really - okay...years??) I felt like I was watching my dreams and future being taken away from me. It's a sad and devastating feeling. But today things have started to change. I feel there is a shift and a hope that I am going to make it. This fall I will be heading to London to get my Postgraduate Diploma in Garden Design, which will shape the rest of my life. Exactly how, I don't know - but I know it will.

I am extremely excited and grateful for this opportunity. I can hardly believe it!  London for one whole year! Being surrounded by garden-obsessed people for one whole year! Study and training in the field I am obsessed over for one whole year! I am elated.

And yet, I know in the end, when my UK time is all over - I actually do want to come back to Utah. I thought for the longest time that maybe Seattle (my fav state-side city) would be the place I would like to stay for forever and grow as a designer, but I feel I can do more good here and have a greater influence in the world of garden design here. For years I have been talking about starting my own garden design academy where I would have affordable classes and workshops open to the public...evening classes...so that working folk can learn how to create beautiful spaces around their homes. I would have one to two week long courses as well that are more intense. This is what I eventually want to do besides design. I love to teach, I love to share. And I love the Utah plant palette.

As I was in Oregon this past month sourcing plant material for projects, I realized how much I do love the Utah climate and it's USDA Hardiness Zone (that determines what plants will grow where) - and that I love creating gardens here. And that I would rather create gardens here on a regular basis than in Oregon, or Washington, or California, etc. Although I will say that once I return from London, I do hope to be a "traveling designer" and have a few projects in California and Washington.....and Italy why not? An international garden designer based out of Salt Lake City. How does that sound?

Pretty fab, I think.

P.S. You can still donate to my Go Fund Me Campaign by going here: Yeah!  Thanks for your support and please share! I have until July 7th 11pm Utah time to reach my goal!

 

Work Trip: Oregon

For the past week I have been in Oregon meeting a few plant growers and becoming familiar with their nursery stock and operations. Networking is important in any business as is educating yourself on how your industry works on the front end and behind the scenes.  

I did have some specific specimens I was looking for for a particular project and I may have found the proper pieces! 

The weather was wonderful - a good mix of everything. I really do love (western) Oregon and besides a three-month stint of living in Arizona, Oregon is the state I have frequented most often. Honestly, I do not have an affinity for the city of Portland though there are some really great aspects to it; Seattle to the north will always have my heart. That said, the gorge and the coast line do it for me every time! As well as the acres and acres of nursery stock!!! I could have wandered through the neat rows of trees and shrubs for hours and days.

 

Architecture Tuesday: Shadowboxx

It's back! Architecture Tuesday is back.

I found this short video about an amazing piece of architecture: Shadowboxx, by Olson Kundig Architects, San Juan Islands, WA, 2010. 

Give it a watch and be amazed!

Shadowboxx responds to a desire to facilitate an intimate understanding of this special place and explores the tradition of gathering around a fire. Tucked between a thicket of trees and a rising bank, the house sits in a natural clearing created by the strong winds that force back the trees from the rocky bank. The building purposely confuses the traditional boundaries between a built structure and its surroundings. Its masses are modeled by winds off the water, exterior cladding is allowed to weather and rust, and shifting doors, shutters, walls and roofs constantly modulate the threshold between inside and outside.

Inside the home, a gallery runs the length of the house with rooms spilling off of it. Two 15’ by 10’ steel clad doors slide open to reveal the main living space, named the cloud room for its ever-changing atmospherics. A glass-walled bunkroom, it contains six custom-designed rolling platforms that serve both as sofas and beds and enable the room to morph and accommodate different functions. Exterior awning shutters facing the water can be closed for protection from the elements or for security when the owner is away.

A guest room sits at one end of the house, and the bathhouse at the other. The bathhouse is topped by a 16×20’ roof that opens the room like a cigar box at the push of a button. Materials with a strong tactility are used throughout the house, including rammed earth floors, reclaimed oak floorplanks, unpainted gypsum board and steel walls, corrugated steel siding and roofing, and reclaimed scaffolding planks for the ceiling.

Interior design by Viekman.

(text taken from the Olsen Kundig Architects website

 

Delivery Day!

Each April we head to the nursery to create several annual plant containers - they sit in the greenhouse filling in and filling out - then mid-June (after the danger of the last front for PC has passed) they are delivered! Today was delivery day - a big deal in our book!! A day we always look forward to. 

We had a total of 15 planters delivered today - 9 for Rivendell and 6 for Trestle Creek Ranch, the property next door.

For Rivendell we start with the Wind Chime Garden planters, which are 7 - based on color-themes...


Then we come to the two Lotus Planters, one that gets full sun, and the other mostly shade...we change it up each year making improvements as we go!


Now for the Trestle Creek Ranch Planters...I only took pictures of 3 and will nab the other 3 in a month or so - when they are more full and happy with color! 


I can't wait for the next several moths to see each of these planters come into their own!  

I Have Been Accepted to The Inchbald School of Design!

Several months ago I was accepted to attend The Inchbald School of Design in London. It is one of the leading centers in garden design in the world...yes - the world! I would be going for what is called the Post-Graduate Diploma in Garden Design with the option of adding on a Masters. Yes and yes!  

But - tuition is 40K and then there's living in London for one year.  I am doing all I can to get there and so far scholarships, grants, and loans are not possible. The school is independent and overseas and is not recognized by the U.S dept. of Education - so I can't get a student loan. And I don't have enough collateral to get any kind of a business or personal loan for the amount I need. 

SO - here we go! Crowd-funding! Please help me get there - Every dollar helps. My all-or-nothing-goal is $65,000.00. You can go to my Go Fund Me Page  to find out more about this opportunity, and to leave a pledge. If my goal is met by the 8th of July I'll be able to go!! You can also check out my website - lorienhall.com to get more info.

Thanks for any help that can be given! 

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Summer Art Showcase - Covey Center for the Arts

Tonight was the opening reception for the 2nd Annual Summer Art Showcase at the Covey Center for the Arts in Provo, Utah. I had submitted three of my Lorflor Project paintings and two were accepted! It's the first time I have entered my art into a show since high school, so I was pretty excited. 

Many of my family members came to support me (thanks guys!) and we enjoyed hanging around my pieces listening to people talk about what I must have been thinking or trying to accomplish with my painting - or about how much they loved it! Watching others react to my work was definitely a favorite part of the evening. 

The show runs until July 28th - so be sure to stop by if you are in the Provo area! And please take a moment to vote for your favorite piece, as there is a people's choice award!

Muse of a Headdress is on the main level, and Arpeggio in Bloom is on the second level. 

Girl looking at Muse of a Headdress

Girl looking at Muse of a Headdress

Arpeggio in Bloom 

Arpeggio in Bloom 

A Fresh Start

Welcome to my blog, Lorien Hall Everyday - where I share my comings and goings as a landscape designer, architecture lover, painter, traveler and whatever else I am up to at the moment! I have been around the blogging scene for many many years now...but with my brand new website launching this week (Hooray!), I decided to leave all my old posts behind and begin from scratch. A fresh start. I look forward to the unknown road ahead and hope you enjoy walking it with me. 

 

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