
Tabi Jackson Gee
Journalist and Writer at Freelance
Garden Designer and Writer @ftweekend @_houseandgarden @countrylife.
Articles
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1 week ago |
countrylife.co.uk | Tabi Jackson Gee
You never forget your first RHS Chelsea Flower Show — a heady concoction of big-budget show gardens, colourful, independent nursery exhibitors and high profile sponsors. The ‘Spring Show’ is the date for garden lovers everywhere and its prestige pulls in an enormous crowd (about 170,000) of committed RHS members, green-fingered celebrities and tourists alike. BBC prime-time coverage is consumed by a further three million viewers. It has to be seen to be believed.
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4 weeks ago |
thegentlemansjournal.com | Tabi Jackson Gee
Summer is on its way – and with it, almost inevitably, comes a willingness to head to the gym, an appetite to dress better, and a surge in dating-app downloads. The winter parkas are shed, and the skin is all there to bare. Yet, the world of digital courting is a complex minefield nowadays, and the choice of platforms is seemingly endless – so, our advice is to stick to a few simple, easy-to-follow rules that’ll help you navigate this space without losing your dignity. 1.
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2 months ago |
houseandgarden.co.uk | Tabi Jackson Gee
They're often overlooked in favour of evergreen climbers, but hedges are the original and best screening option - and something I always try and recommend to clients. They bring atmosphere to a garden, can divide up a space, soften borders and provide backdrops to colourful and textured planting schemes.
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Feb 11, 2025 |
houseandgarden.co.uk | Tabi Jackson Gee
Fiona Golfar's writing shed at her Cornwall house is known as The Dale after its maker, local carpenter Dale Primmer. The 'eyebrow' beam makes this building look particularly charming. Paul MasseyOn a recent project we spent ages deliberating over garden room ideas and where to put the new structure, before realising that the best place for it was as actually just as an extension to the house.
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Oct 28, 2024 |
houseandgarden.co.uk | Tabi Jackson Gee
When children are shown plants and taught how to identify them, they’re encouraged to see more than just flowers. They look at textures, leaf shape, patterns in the bark. All of these things are what makes a tree beautiful, even when it doesn’t have a big show of blooms. And in a front garden, somewhere you see a tree up close every day, all through the year, these different aesthetic qualities can bring so much interest. The more you look, the more there is to enjoy.
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