from my garden, Botanical Eva Nemeth from my garden, Botanical Eva Nemeth

Crab apple

There are four crab apple trees on one of my favourite bridlepath. I love seeing these in all season but they are always my favourite when the trees lose their leaves and only the apples hang on like baubles. A few days ago, a big branch from one of these trees broke off so I saved a few bits and brought them home. I love crab apples trees a lot. I love their wildness, their imperfect shape and as they grow old, their mossy branches. They also say Autumn is not far now..

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Meanwhile my crab apple:

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It’s a Comtesse de Paris that I planted in February and is enjoying the company of Ammi Majus growing all around it. I chose this one for its apples that turn orange in the Autumn. Although I really liked its simple, single flowers in the Spring too.

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Gardens, Scotland Eva Nemeth Gardens, Scotland Eva Nemeth

Garden by the sea

In recent years, one of the highlights of my trips up to Scotland is meeting Rachael of Hedgerow / @hedgerow for a coffee or lunch and a walk and chat around the streets of Portobello. She shows me the most beautiful little streets , colourful old doors and gates and we admire anything green and flowery (I must do a blog post just on that). When, after a long long time, we finally travelled up to Scotland again in May, I got to see Rachael’s beautiful garden too and her stylish home (proper magazine material but I didn’t want to be too pushy on that front, maybe next time)

Rachael is a floral designer and an architect and these passions of hers can be found everywhere you look in her garden and home.

We had tea and cinnamon buns and a good, much needed chat and I spent some time out to her rainy garden with my camera. We then headed out for lunch to Rachael’s favourite place - Skylark - before walking back home through rainy Portobello and making a flat lay with flowers from her garden.

Making this flat lay with flowers from Rachael’s garden was such a treat. I never take it for granted picking flowers (or dismantling a bouquet) just for this. The backdrop we used was her kitchen table and the light in the kitchen just worked perfectly and helped us create this moody image on that rainy day.

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Thank you Rachael for this very special day, I had the best time. This must have been the most relaxing day of my holiday.

I’m going to share with you more private gardens, do come along.

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from my garden Eva Nemeth from my garden Eva Nemeth

The first posy

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There will be flowers now in the garden until the end of the year. This is the first posy from the garden and oh it feels so nice picking these colourful little Spring flowers. The garden I’m currently custodian of - since we’re only renting but we can do whatever we want to the garden, seriously, we have the best landlords - so this garden once belonged to a gardener. How I love this thought. In the Spring, it’s full of all the flowers you see here. I added lots of hellebores myself and there are no narcissi growing in the garden but I always grow them in pots. One day, in my own garden, these flowers will grow too, in the orchard where I’ll leave the grass long..

There will be flowers now in the garden until the end of the year. And around me, outside the garden too, so many beautiful ones. This year I’m photographing two books with two wonderful flower growers. I feel extremely lucky for calling this my work but also because I know I’ll learn so much from them. The only thing though I cannot seem to learn at all is making bouquets. So I’m going to stick to these little posies. I always find it easy to arrange them in a vase and then take them out from the vase and voilà, the posy is done.

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There will be flowers now in the garden until the end of the year. It’s sometimes hard work but most of the time just pure happiness. Nothing relaxes me more than working in the garden (oh! or taking pictures in the/a garden) and I do love brining in flowers, branches, green leaves, anything. But I also love brining home bits from my walks. I came across this beautiful cherry plum tree yesterday..

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There will be flowers now in the garden until the end of the year. I’m planning to make a posy every month and also very regurarly photograph the garden. I promise.

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Botanical, Love my work Eva Nemeth Botanical, Love my work Eva Nemeth

Forced bulbs

I came home with some beautiful flowers and a pot filled with Narcissus bulbocodium ‘Arctic Bells’ from a photo shoot last week. Part of that shoot reminded me of a garden book (and I cannot remember now which one it was) where there was an image of a room filled with pots that were filled with forced bulbs. Somehow that photo mesmerized me and that image stayed with me. During that shoot last week, I was able to take photographs carrying that very similar feeling and that made me think oh my, this is like a dream.

So today I turned our dining room into a mini studio and had a little play with these flowers. The dining room is the only place in the house where I’m happiest with the light (at the moment as I know it can change any time) and that light looks like this..

Early Spring flowers

Early Spring flowers

So I had this beautiful pot filled with these pettitcoat daffodils. I only took them out of the pot for a little flat lay but now they’re all safely back in the pot. But I do love seeing bulbs in their full beauty, the roots, the bulb and the flowers. I absolutely love this connection.

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Narcissus bulbocodium 'Arctic Bells‘

Narcissus bulbocodium 'Arctic Bells‘

I rarely force bulbs myself but I do buy bulbs early January (planted by garden nurseries). As soon as I get home with them, I remove them from their plastic containers and plant them into terracotta pots. The ‘Arctic Bells’ below were gifts from two wonderful persons I had shoots with last week.

Narcissi, muscari, snowdrops

Narcissi, muscari, snowdrops

I keep them in the conservatory which is the coldest place at the moment and slowly bring them in throughout February. To brighten up the days that are already growing longer. This is the month the sun starts to shine through the neighbour’s cherry tree and into our kitchen in sunny mornings too. Very prescious moments.

Paperwhite narcissus

Paperwhite narcissus

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Snowdrops and narcissus

It’s hard to believe it’s still early February and there are already so many beautiful flowers around. All of these are also British grown, the cut narcissi all from Cornwall.

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around England Eva Nemeth around England Eva Nemeth

The last walk of 2020

This was the very last walk of the year and indeed in the best comany. I met Justine and Stan in Pishill, a walk we did a few times in the past, it’s a lovely walk, with lots of woodland, but also big spaces for running for the dogs, some houses on our way and at the end, there’s the church where we have always have a cup of tea and cake. I think we were a bit happy to see the back of 2020 and little did we know that we wouldn’t be able to walk at all in January (or maybe even February?) Anyway, we did enjoy this walk a lot. The beautiful foggy morning turned into a sunny day.

I have decided to keep this blog alive and will regularly post this year.

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around England Eva Nemeth around England Eva Nemeth

A misty November morning

Starting lockdown 2.0 with a beautiful misty morning walk. I feel extremely lucky living in the countryside and that as soon as I step out of the door, all this beauty is right there, waiting for me to enjoy. I’m an early riser and early mornings are my tonic. Misty mornings like these are the cherry on the cake. Hope you’ll experience beautiful mornings too this late Autumn and Winter too.



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Scotland, my travels Eva Nemeth Scotland, my travels Eva Nemeth

October in Scotland

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We were very much in need of leaving the house. I did get to travel (and photograph wonderful gardens with the most wonderful people and I can’t wait to be able to tell you more about this) but S. has been working from home (which is great too, of course) but well, we just needed to be away a bit. And so we went to Scotland to catch the beautiful, golden October there. I was craving for the wilderness, cool and rainy days, muted colours and that quiet and calm I very often find there.

We stayed in a self catering accomodation only twenty minutes from Edinburgh but really out in the middle of nowhere. This suited us and the current situation perfectly. We went for quiet walks, up the Lammermuir hills but also to the sea a couple of times. It felt so good being somewhere this tranquil.

We stayed on a farm in a wee bothy. Backing our garden there, there was a walled garden and an old abandoned building that captured me the first time I saw it. It looked derelict and I sooo wanted to see what was behind the walls of the garden. One morning I took a photo of the house, shared it on Instagram and tadaam, not long after that, the owner of that house messaged me. But what are the chances??! Someone who follows me must have recognized the house and let her know? No idea. But long story short, she let me go over and have a look around. I was so excited to (officially) trespass and see the house and the grounds from close! It’s been lying empty for years and the new owners have now started the works and I cannot wait to see the changes next time we’re up.

So above is the house as I first saw it from behind the fence and then from a bit closer. I took many more images of it but I also want to respect its privacy. Oh and the garden is full of beautiful holly bushes and mostly lived in by sheep and that’s about it at the moment but I’m sure it will see some wonderful changes.

So yes, I was looking for peace and quiet. Crisp and grey. Muted colours and wilderness. I needed headspace and to be able to think without sitting in front of a screen. What is a bit unknown of a Winter and a new year just round the corner, these few days away were so important to me, to see clear and to make plans. All this - and more - happened in Scotland. I had two shoots that I’ll tell you about soon. Until then, enjoy October wherever you are. This is by far my favourite month, for all the reasons I mentioned above, so I’m just happy being here.

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