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Window Shutters For Security And Lighting Options

When you want to add style to your house, one way of doing this and adding security at the same time, is by having window shutters fixed to the exterior of your house. Exterior window shutters add a traditional, Mediterranean look to a property. These days, most houses have glass windows, but before that, people used shutters to regulate the light levels, prevent insects and the cold from entering and for protection.

Exterior window shutters are available in many different shapes and made from various materials, although the most common ones are wooden and oblong. The quality of the materials used will determine how long your shutters will last, because, as with all exterior goods, they will be exposed to all types of extreme weather conditions.

Plastic, vinyl, metal and wooden shutters are available at many home improvement centres. Although they look good, shutters also have practical uses. They can prevent glaring noon sunlight from over heating your home as well as offering protection.

Cedar wood is a good choice, as are most other hard woods. Hardwoods are more resistant to rain and sunlight and, so long as they are painted, varnished or oiled regularly – at least once a year – then your shutters will give you ten or more years of good service.

Most varieties of hardwood are very resistant to attack from insects too. This is because a lot of them contain oils that are repugnant or even toxic to insects. However, if you are unsure about the quality of the timber that your shutters are made from, you can paint them.

Painting, staining or oiling is far simpler if you carry it out before you hang the shutters. If you want to use oil to take care of your new wooden shutters, first stain them to the colour that you want them to be with a stain without varnish. When you have accomplished the desired shade and it has dried, pour oil linseed oil onto a cloth and rub it into the wood in circular motions. The more coats you give it the better, but it may not take more that two or three coats.

If you want to varnish your shutters, either stain them to the colour you require as above and then seal them with clear yacht varnish or use a stained yacht varnish without the stain. Whichever way you go, thin the first coat of varnish down until it is almost watery. Paint it on and leave to dry. Rub it down with medium coarse sandpaper and then coat it again with neat varnish. Wait for it to dry and sand it down again, but with fine sandpaper. Add at least one more coat, but it is a matter of the more the better.

If you decide to paint them, apply a primer or some thinned down undercoat. Wait for it to dry and sand it lightly with fine sandpaper. Next, put on a coat of undercoat that is suitable for the finishing colour. For example, grey is good for black, brown and even green or red. Sand it down when it is dry with fine paper. Finally, gloss your shutters with the final colour.

In conclusion, hang the shutters on apposite hinges using brass screws. Next time, you paint or varnish your shutters paint over the screw heads, although brass never looks out of place anyway.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on several subjects, but is at present involved with researching wrought iron floor lamps. If you would like to know more or check out great offers, please go to our website at Wrought Iron Light

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Greenhouse Designs – Choosing The Best For Your Garden

If you are a keen gardener, then you perhaps would like or already have a greenhouse. A greenhouse allows a gardener to indulge in gardening all year round, but did you know that the design of the greenhouse is very important? Greenhouse designs vary according to what they are to be used for and to some extent where the garden is situated. Therefore, when it comes to greenhouse designs, choosing the best for your garden is quite important.

If you get the correct greenhouse for your intentions and use it properly, your greenhouse will pay for itself over and over again, but not only that, it will repay for its carbon footprint by growing more flowers which will in turn help keep the environment in balance. Not to mention keeping the gardener contented. Everybody is a winner with a greenhouse.

Greenhouses are not cheap and one often wonders why. There just does not appear to be much to them to make them so expensive. For this reason, it is imperative that you get the best of greenhouse designs for what you want to grow.

You will also have to take size into account: the amount of space that you can allow for your new greenhouse and how many plants you want to produce in it.

After you have thought about the overall size that you would like, the next deliberation is the basic structure. Do you want it attached to your house like a lean-to or do you want it to be free-standing?

Free-standing greenhouse designs are more expensive but they are also the more flexible of the two greenhouse designs. They are more expensive because you will have to have four walls not three and you will have to run water and electric mains to it.

Free-standing greenhouse designs are more flexible and therefore offer greater proceeds because you can locate them wherever you like to gain the most light from the sun. Normally, this means having the longest side to the south in the northern hemisphere.

Attached greenhouse designs use the wall of the house or garage as one wall of the greenhouse. Which wall of the greenhouse that is, is up to you naturally, but if you can utilize one of the gable ends, the short side, so much the better.

Try to have one of the longest walls facing the sun for most of the day. Again, you will need to run water and electricity into it, but this does not usually mean burying the cable and pipe underground or armouring the cable, which works out cheaper.

Once you have made your choice from the several greenhouse designs, you can make your mind up which plants you would like to cultivate in it. You can literally grow anything you like, if you create the right ecosystem for it. So, if you want to have as much flexibility as possible invest in a good lighting system.

Get the best and most adaptable you can afford. Look for ones that will provide a broad range spectrum ‘grow light’, so that your plants will not suffer in the winter and get normal tube lighting for yourself for when you need to see better.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with visual comfort lighting. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Outdoor Wall Lamps.

categories: greenhouse,flowers,trees,garden,landscaping,flora,pond,nature,recreation,house,family,happiness,diy,hobbies

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Ideas On How To Use Container Gardening To Decorate Your House And Garden

Ideas On How To Use Container Gardening To Decorate Your House And Garden

Nearly every house and garden presents numerous attractive settings for container plants. Suburban gardens, estates, little city backyards, and summer cottages—all can be heightened by this type of gardening. A few of the seemingly continual possibilities admit entranceways, steps, courtyards, walls, rooftops, balconies, patios, breezeways, lawns, driveways, walks, sundecks, windowsills, porches, summer houses, even tree stumps can be utilised

Let us start with the entrance, a focal point for every house. A uncomplicated arrangement consists of akin container plants at each side of the doorway. If the house is colloquial, enamelled tubs will make a beaming note, while urns or ornamental pots are more apropos if the architecture is conventional. The arrangement, however, necessitate not be balanced, since a single container at either side, particularly if the doorway is off-center, is admirable. A ample specimen can be equilibrated by an aggrouping of little pots, and individual other absorbing combinations can be worked out. Sometimes, the front entranceway can meabound up as an alfresco place for house plants, but be bound they are not unwrapped to alcoholic sun and wind

Unexpected areas like side and rear entrances can also serve as backgrounds for pot plants in casual groupings. For cheerful steps, consider tubs of petunias, or dwarf dahlias, or boxes of herbs to be utilized in fudging. Tuberous begonias, fuchsias, patient Lucy, and musky nicotiana work out the problem of what to mature in shade

Porches or verandas, traditional or contemporary in style, offer numerous settings for pots, window boxes, and hanging baskets. Indeed, the smooth container garden can be centred there so that plants can be easily gave care for. If the porch is opened on three sides, it will yield exposures to suit a variety of specimens

The patio or terrace, beside or beyond the house, where family and friends gather to eat or relax, is an ideal location. If it is conventional, pick out nipped evergreens and set up pots in balanced rows, perhaps run along up against the house or along the edge of the terrace. If the site is colloquial, make careless groupings of one or two full-length plants with smaller ones in front. Either way, let for a few ample plants in tubs or boxes for accent and height

Container plants may line walks and paths that lead to the house, garage, or garden. They can rest on enamelled areas along fences and walls and on driveways where they are not in the way. If the driveway adjoins the foundation of the house, plant containers may be placed there

Tops of garden or terrace walls are ideal places, too. Put little pots and boxes on full-length, bare walls and ample containers on humble, beamy surfaces. Hanging plants of ivy geraniums in the sun and fuchsias in the shade will cascade down from walls, as they do in the patios of Spain, Portugal, and Italy. On Rhodes, I retrieve a fifteen-foot wall exceeded with a row of thirty glittering chromatic tin cans afloat of roses and other flowers

Think of what you can do with rooftops and sundecks where considerable space is usually available. Here sun-loving plants, like geraniums, most annuals, cacti, and succulents can be matured, but, again, admit ample specimens for height to give a garden feeling. A few large boxes and planters for trees and shrubs are adequate but be bound to include some everchromatics for year-round chromatic

Many gardeners like to insert container plants in flower borders to introduce unusual specimens, such as tropicals in the North. Large tubs can be set at the corners and small pots may be scattered among the permanent flowering plants. One gardener keeps a supply of potted chromatic Fiat Enchantress geraniums on hand to fill up naked spots in her ample borders, traveling them about as necessitated. Most of the geraniums are in four-inch clay pots, but there are larger specimens for the center of each aggrouping. Make bound their procure, sink pots a few inches into the ground

You can always dress up the lamp post in your yard with container plants at the base or you can suspend a hanging basket of lantana, perhaps from the top. Ivy geraniums in an old-fashioned dark kettle are discriminating for the base. Bare posts that support sectional roofs over patios or enamelled surfaces of synchronal houses appear more bewitching if potted plants are constellated around the bases or abiding boxes for plants are constructed there. Try implanting climb uping up ivy in a pot and train it to climb up the posts

Novelty containers—donkey carts, wheelbarrows, and spinning wheels—can be fun in some places, but, of course, such planters must not be overdone. Usually they are set on lawns, on a terrace or beside a gate or doorway. (If you life in a neighborhood that has a house owners association check up on with them first to see if this is let). Steps leading to a driveway or street or to antithetic levels in a garden can be stressed with pot plants. A few can be set up at the top or at the base of the stairs. And, there are other possibilities. Tree trunks reduce to the ground or gone forth a few feet eminent make acceptable pedestals for ample containers. In fact, this can be a solution to the problem of what to do with a trunk too big-ticket to take away. If you have a tree with dense shade, why not reconstruct a pretty sitting down area around it and grace the space with containers of coleus, wax and other begonias, caladiums, ferns and other shade-tolerant plants

These are just a few ideas for using container plants around your house and garden. Use your imagination and have fun. Happy Gardening!

Copyright © 2006 Mary Hanna All Rights Reserved

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