Carolyne Roehm's Fall Notebook
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Average customer review:Product Description
- A fall scrapbook of gardening methods, recipes, and tabletop designs.
- Hands-on workbook format with pockets for clippings and graph paper for plans.
- Tips on Halloween and Thanksgiving festivities and decorating ideas with pages for notes.
- Full-color instructions to create magnificent autumn bouquets.
- Lists to help you organize entertaining chores and speed the task of putting the garden to bed
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #378779 in Books
- Published on: 1999-09-01
- Released on: 1999-08-18
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Spiral-bound
- 144 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
"Autumn is a season that lures us indoors, and shifts our focus from the garden, the pool, or the beach to the home." The magic and mystique of the fall season are splendidly captured in Carolyn Roehm's Fall Notebook: Garden, Hearth, Tradition, Home, a collection of recipes, crafts, entertainment tips, and garden projects. In her introduction to the book, Roehm--former fashion designer turned author--writes,
As a gardener, I feel a certain sadness as I am forced to break a bond that I have spent the spring and summer nurturing. Although it is easy for one to become nostalgic during this time, it is necessary to move forward because it is crucial to prepare for the long winter that lies ahead ... although those beautiful blooms are a long way off and we must put our garden to bed, we shift to a new buzz of life that is brought about by the gathering of family and friends under one roof for the holidays.
Arranged by individual plants--dahlias and chrysanthemums can be counted on for their late-fall showiness--as well as specific projects and festivities, including Halloween, bulb planting, and Thanksgiving, each chapter offers a host of ideas for savoring autumn's flavor through arts and crafts projects, practical gardening tips, succulent recipes, and creative entertaining advice. Celebrate Turkey day in style with elegant place cards--easily created with a rubber stamp and ecru stationary--that compliment lemon leaf, eucalyptus berry, and autumn-hued rose table arrangements, while a menu of poisson with rosemary and sage, potato and parsnip purée, and pumpkin soufflé--all clearly spelled out in Roehm's meticulous recipes--would make any family thankful. With full-color photographs, pockets for storing ideas and graph paper for planning--not to mention useful lists to help you organize events and gardening chores--the Fall Notebook is as glorious to look at as it is practical to use.
About the Author
Carolyne Roehm, noted author and lifestyle contributor to Good Morning America, brings her gardening expertise to viewers weekly as the host of Country Homes, Country Gardens.
In 1991, Roehm, who had always taken great pleasure in indulging and surrounding herself with things she loved, decided to turn her personal passion for beauty and comfort into a fulfilling career. A longtime associate (and neighbor) of famed couturier, Oscar de la Renta, Roehm began her own fashion business, setting her designs apart from many others in the industry with her unflagging insistence on only the finest quality materials. Her designs quickly found a home with discriminating consumers, as her first year alone saw revenues exceeding $3 million. But Roehm's passion for beauty extended beyond the world of fashion, and she became determined to broaden her horizons accordingly.
Following a stint at the famed Paris flower shop, Moulie Savart, Roehm took the knowledge she gained there and put it into practical use for the everyday gardener. Resulting from her considerable experience, she takes great joy in revealing the many secrets she learned to help everyone achieve a bountiful and beautiful garden.
In 1997, Roehm published her first book, A Passion for Flowers (September 1997, HarperCollins Publishers) in which she detailed the experts' tricks to perfect gardening. A firm believer in luxury for everyone, Roehm feels that luxury doesn't necessarily mean expensive. Her breathtaking floral arrangements, for example, traditionally contain many common flowers such as carnations, marigolds, bleeding hearts, and Queen Anne's lace, which she collects from her own garden at her Connecticut home.
Roehm applies the fashion lessons she learned to her flowers. The familiar cry of "accessorize" is as important to arranging blooms as it is to one's own appearance. "I can't tell you how often I've seen a dress ruined with the wrong accessories," Roehm explains. "It's the same with flowers. Even the most beautiful flowers don't work if they're in the wrong vase or placed against the wrong background."
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Welcome to the
NOTEBOOKAutumn is a second spring and every leaf's a flower. -Albert Camus
Although some find a certain sadness in the passing of bright and sunny summer days, I find that one of the greatest joys of living in New England is the breathtaking transformation in nature that can be experienced most dramatically in autumn. There is nothing more invigorating or nostalgic than taking a Sunday drive through Connecticut and being captivated by the brilliant colors of mother nature's canvas as your instincts to hibernate are aroused by the smell of wood burning in fireplaces. Autumn is a season that lures us indoors, and shifts our focus from the garden, the pool, or the beach to the home.
As a gardener, I feel a certain sadness as I am forced to break a bond that I have spent the spring and summer nurturing. Although it Is easy for one to become nostalgic during this time, it is necessary to move forward because it is crucial to prepare for the long winter that lies ahead. This is Just as important as the preparations that we all make in the spring, and although those beautiful blooms are a long way off and we must put our garden to bed, we shift to a new buzz of life that is brought about by the gathering of fail-illy and friends under one roof for the holidays. - Since childhood, I have always cherished the holidays of autumn. Although Christmastime is one of the greatest loves in my life, I enjoy the whimsical fun and frivolity of Halloween and the way in which Thanksgiving simply demands only one thing: that we gather together with our favorite people in order to celebrate. Thanksgiving to me captures the essence of American tradition, a time that removes us from our busy lives and brings us back to the basics and the simplicity of our roots.
Customer Reviews
Wonderful!!
Use Carolyne Roehm's books to read and drool, get great ideas from, give as elegant gifts, or just keep it on a coffee table to admire from afar.
Good purchase
Exactly the book I was looking for - great photos, good hints, clear explanations. A pleasure for the eyes!
More a look at a socialite's lifestyle
As is true with all four books in this series, this "notebook" is beautifully photographed. Ms. Roehm's series does not offer much depth in any of the "categories" covered in the book-- gardening, hearth (whatever that is), etc. but does demonstrate her truly beautiful design sense, especially in floral arranging. The spiral-bound format, including pockets for the reader's own clippings, and the many blank pages for the reader's own notes are more gimmicky than helpful, and take up lots of space in an already "lightweight" effort. Unlike the Martha Stewart books, against which these are positioned, Ms. Roehm's books do not offer the detailed "how-to" approach of Ms. Stewart's excrutiatingly detailed tomes, but are more a peek into Ms. Roehm's perfectionist lifestyle, which is very entertaining in itself. With many, many references to her home, affectedly titled "Weatherstone", Ms. Roehm's books are more a "season" in the life of a newly monied socialite than an expert's teachings. However, all said, Ms. Roehm's text demonstrates a quick wit and a somewhat self-deprecating style, which when combined with the almost desperate desire to impress the reader with the elegance of 'ole "Weatherstone", makes one see her as a charming, insecure, vulnerable, and very talented woman. The four "notebooks" left me wanting to see more photographs of her exquisite designs, less from her as an "expert", and gave me the impression that I would like to learn more about her journey post-divorce from Henry Kravis, and post-clothing design business. An expert she ain't, but an interesting woman, most certainly.



