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Star spangled meadows
Camassias are tall, elegant and simple to grow– it’s easy to see why people fall in love with these American beauties, says Val Bourne
Playing at chequers
In the first of two articles on the country seat of Britain’s Prime Ministers, John Goodall uses a diary to explain the circumstances of its magnificent Edwardian transformation
Interiors The designer's room
Having rescued this Tuscan villa from near ruin, its British owners commissioned Artichoke to design a hard-working kitchen
Born to be wild
Bird’s-foot trefoil, yellow rattle, rock-rose, scabious and selfheal: the limestone grassland of the Cotswolds could soon be flooded with wildflowers once again, thanks to a new planting scheme. Nicola Chapman finds out more
A BRIDGE WORTH CROSSING
Jack Watkins takes a trip down the River Thames and a look back at London’s illustrious bridge-building heritage
With Their Own Fair Hands
Interior designers can dream up the best furniture, says Arabella Youens
The Power Of Patience
The architect George Saumarez Smith describes how he created a home by slow evolution, rather than revolution
TURNING OVER A NEW LEAF
There are 8.3 million trees in London, almost one for every member of the capital’s population, but they need our protection now more than ever, finds Jack Watkins
The feathered home-wrecker
It took one man years of observation to convince the world about the sinister behaviour of cuckoos. More than a century later, as the bird’s population plummets, his work is still revered, says Jack Watkins
Splendid isolation
The resilience of these three superb Sussex houses, one owned by the Shelley family, reminds one that there will be good times ahead
A mile of shopping
To coincide with the publication of a definitive new study of Britain’s most famous retail destination, Andrew Saint looks at the history of London’s Oxford Street
When the curtain comes down
Theatre has been forced offstage before now, whether for disease or war, but it has always managed to survive and reinvent itself
A life in design
Sixty years after Jacqueline Duncan founded the Inchbald School of Interior Design, she continues to champion the profession she helped to create
I wake up every morning thinking of gin
With a 200-year family history of distilling, Natalie Wallis can concoct a gin to suit any list of demands–even one that reflects the seaside, Japanese tourists and The Rolling Stones in one, says Rupert Ponsonby
Bewitching, bucolic and brilliant Upton Wold, Gloucestershire
This magical Cotswolds garden has been thoughtfully created over almost half a century–with one eye always on the mesmerising view, says Tilly Ware
How To Choose The Right Greenhouse
With so many of us at home with more time to garden than usual, this is the perfect time to invest in a glasshouse, but which is right for you? John Hoyland offers some pointers
The tide waits for no man
Ancient waterways, massive skies, and a new company charting old maps. Nick Hammond sails Norfolk’s fabled coastline using the timeless power of wind and tide
The secret life of the page-turner
Pippa Cuckson turns a spotlight onto the discreet world of this rarely noticed musician, whose quick thinking can save a concert
The joker in the pack
Played with friends, family or in solitude, there are few things as familiar as a pack of cards. Yasha Beresiner explores this form of entertainment, propaganda tool and, sometimes, work of art
On Galloway shores
A childhood spent in the company of curlews and cattle is one of magic. In an extract from his new book, Native, Patrick Laurie recounts his return to a vanishing way of life
Meadows make livestock
It’s more a case of April flowers, rather than showers, as John Lewis-Stempel gets down on his knees in an attempt to add floral richness to a rough-grazed field
Long live the May Queen
A mainstay of the hedgerow, a wildlife haven, the queen of the woods: this is the hawthorn’s moment, eulogises Matthew Rice
Building on history: The gardens at Benington Lordship, Stevenage, Hertfordshire
Kathryn Bradley-Hole describes how to take on a renowned garden and make it work for a new generation
Character, history and style
Columbine Hall, Suffolk The home of Hew Stevenson and Leslie Geddes-Brown A medieval moated manor house has been lovingly re-imagined as the beau idéal of an English country home. Jeremy Musson reports on this remarkable achievement
Back to Black Beauty
A hymn to the horse, a comment on slavery, an ode to rural Norfolk: Anna Sewell’s enduringly popular novel is all this and more 200 years after its author’s birth, explains James Clarke
How Do You Like Your Eggs In The Morning?
How do you achieve the perfect scramble or poach? How can you tell if an egg is addled? And is that double-yolker lucky or a harbinger of death? Claire Jackson divulges all
London In lockdown
In all of its 2,000-year history, it seems unlikely that the City of London has ever stood so silent as it does presently. Can we learn from the quiet, asks Architectural Editor John Goodall
Waving the virtual paddle
Online auctions prove successful across the country, from a French nobleman to English watercolours and a stuffed Adélie penguin from Capt Scott’s fatal expedition.
Prints charming
Why textiles block printed by hand are all the rage
Imagining antiquity
In the 300th anniversary year of Piranesi’s birth, Huon Mallalieu considers the architectural fantasies of one of the most widely recognised names in 18th-century Italian art