I have REALLY been looking forward to this post for a while.  Literally, since I signed up to write on this topic nearly a year ago.  I had no idea what this last year would bring and the evolutions that I and the projects I am involved with have taken, but here I am in December, happy to have this post opportunity so that I can officially get back to something that I have long missed (and I think some of you have too).

I started this blog just a bit over two years ago with the intent to get myself, my sources and my idea files organized. But it quickly became something else (like an inspiration source for lots of you too) and then, now, something else…my primary focus.  A place where I can hopefully have a greater impact on design, and the creation of gardens and personal landscape utopias.  Because I have chosen to let go of many of my clients in the last month and shift my focus to increased writing, bogging, teaching and speaking (among other things) I think I am finally able to bring back some of my most enjoyable blog features.  My most favorite, though time consuming, blog posts have always been the inspiration boards.  I have always loved taking inspiration and creating mood boards from fashion illustrations and now, with this post I am bringing that back, in honor of the inspiration challenge for the Garden Designers Roundtable.

Finding inspiration is easy.  What do you love, what strikes you as beautiful?  What amazes you? Start with that and then leap off taking cues from what is so appealing.  Do you love a particular painting?  Or perhaps a movie, or a destination?  All of these provide continuous sources of inspiration for me and can for you too.  So I have created a new ‘Can you make this into a garden?’ post with this cool hippy chic fashion illustration by Vanessa T Smith. But over the next many months, I will create boards (once a month at least, I promise) that are inspired by other things too.  Do you have a suggestion for inspiration?  I am looking for a challenge to help me prove the point that inspiration can be found everywhere. Or perhaps you would like to create a garden inspiration board to share as well?  Either way, email me I would love to hear from you.

So here is the latest inspiration board…..the Hippy chic garden.

Oh and I have GOT to rename this feature — ‘Can you make this into a garden?’ is just not doing it for me….need something much snappier…..any ideas?

Fashion illustration by Vanessa T Smith

*****I am running behind today — this is supposed to be up by 1:00 and it will be…..but the sources and photo credits are still coming….if you see this message, you can trust that I am working on them while you read…go get a cup of coffee and come back in a little bit they will be ready when you return….;)  ****

I can imagine myself gardening in this hat I found at Ahlan at least if it weren’t so black and heavy felt-ish. I might need to just plop it on when I sit down in the Blacksmith Blossom Chair for a rest. Like the chair, the Chimes are also from Anthropologie. The round stone looking ball is the Kling Granite Stool from DIGS and the pretty (but probably not ok in a real rain storm) umbrella is from dotcomgiftshop.  That leaves the Sailors Nautical Wheel from amazon, which I think could entertain children in a garden for quite some time, even if it was simply attached to pole coming out of the ground. But I think it would be even better if perhaps it could control some sort of water feature. Don’t you?

Click through to see plant inspirations, fabric inspirations, more garden furniture and accessories and even a few hippie chic gardens.

In case you want to do a little reminiscing from some of the past ‘Can you make this into a garden’ challenges….here is the full line up.

Pish Posh

Christian Dior Inspired Fashion Garden

The Preppy Student

The Theatrical Fashionista

The Lucille Garden

Spanish Blue

Modern Beachy

Moody Gray Fashion Inspiration

And the very first Can you make this into a Garden?

Also make sure to check in with all my fellow roundtablers for their posts on the subject of inspiration.

Andrew Keys : Garden Smackdown : Boston, MA

Carolyn Gail Choi : Sweet Home and Garden Chicago : Chicago, IL

Douglas Owens-Pike : Energyscapes : Minneapolis, MN

Ivette Soler : The Germinatrix : Los Angeles, CA

Jocelyn Chilvers : The Art Garden : Denver, CO

Lesley Hegarty & Robert Webber : Hegarty Webber Partnership : Bristol, UK

Pam Penick : Digging : Austin, TX

Rebecca Sweet : Gossip In the Garden : Los Altos, CA

Susan Cohan : Miss Rumphius’ Rules : Chatham, NJ

Susan Morrison : Blue Planet Garden Blog : East Bay, CA

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