Postbaby skin and hair care
Those first few months after having baby are usually filled with stress, sleepless nights, and lovely hormonal changes (yay!) that may or may not affect your skin and hair. Don’t worry, this doesn’t mean they’ll never return to the way they were. But if you’re starting to notice some major postbaby changes, be aware that you’re not alone and prepare yourself for how to deal. Read more
Easy Hair Fixes for Busy Moms
Consumed with caring for baby means there’s absolutely no time for taking care of you! Before you give up, check out these quick fixes. There’s one for every hair type ? yes, even yours! Read more
Summer Colors
Draw inspiration when decorating from summer’s most vibrant colors. Evoke a jovial day at the beach with colors like sea blue and honeydew, or a warm summer evening with soft orange and dandelion.
Bring summer’s fields to your wall with a bright yellow tapestry. The pattern of tapestry resembles dandelion crowns. Read more
Start a Perfect Compost Pile
Follow these tips to make the best compost. Read more
The Instant Garden
Purple Prince Zinnia
Devine made room for plenty of flowers to yield bouquets for the house – planting larkspur and lisianthus for cutting and to splash painterly color throughout the beds. The overall aim was to evoke a traditional French priest’s garden – “both structured and informal,” says Devine, “producing herbs, fruits, and vegetables for the table and flowers for the altar.” His version seems effortless, mixing vegetables with flowers that attract pollinating bees. And because almost all the plants are annuals, this garden goes from bare to burgeoning in a single season.
‘Ronde de Nice’ Squash
“The blossoms are small, cute, and just as delicious as the vegetables themselves. We like to fry the flowers up in a beer batter.”
Don’t be fooled by the beauty here: This garden works as hard as any farm. Growing vegetables organically, without pesticides, was a must for the designer, who harvests from late April (peas and greens, like lettuces, chard, and sorrel) into summer (tomatoes, zucchini, cucumbers) and early fall (turnips and tubers).
‘Victoria’ Salvia
“It’s shocking how well these took off – they started from seed and shot up to be 30 inches tall. Salvia is easy to maintain and great for cutting. We’ll scatter the seeds around the fence this year.”
‘Frosted Queen’ Bachelor’s Buttons
“We love to use these pink flowers in bouquets around the house; they’re great on the bedside table. They remind Thomas of growing up upstate.”
Michael Devine
Michael Devine (foreground) and his partner, Thomas Burak, relax in their backyard garden.
‘Milkmaid’ Nasturtiums
“The seed package promised pale-yellow blossoms, but orange appeared instead. Still, I think they’ll look marvelous cascading down from our flower boxes on the second floor.”
Purple Cabbages
“After a hailstorm destroyed our purple Brussels sprouts, we used these to fill in with deep-colored foliage. It was an ideal, quick emergency fix.”
‘Purple Prince’ Zinnias
“We grow these because they say ’summer’ to us — plus the flowers last a really long time.”
‘Early Sensation’ Cosmos
“The petals look so delicate and airy, but they’re actually quite sturdy, and very easy to grow.”‘Precoville’ Petits Pois
“We chose this pea variety because it’s so compact. We eat the vegetables raw, sprinkled on salads.”
Chic Shed
Devine draped the walls and table inside the shed with his own linen fabrics. The flea market chandelier is powered by good old-fashioned candlelight.
Prettier raised beds: Raised beds give gardeners greater control over soil makeup and condition, but they rarely look this fine. Devine’s inspired trick: He faced his utilitarian, rot-resistant cedar frames with ornamental willow fencing (from $36 for a 4- by 8-foot sheet at mastergardenproducts.com) – the outdoor equivalent to icing a cake. Just be sure to stain the boxes before nailing on the fencing, advises Devine, so the not-so-lovely lumber won’t peek through.
“I wanted to make something small but exquisite on a modest budget,” explains fabric designer Michael Devine. “We had to use a lot of imagination, and I devoted myself to the details.” Devine’s vision would have to be packed into this less-than-fantastic space, a skinny plot just 25 feet wide by 120 feet deep. But the designer proceeded, undeterred, and his devotion paid off. Today the old yard is gone, a lush garden in its place. A tiny wood building – a prefabricated shed, customized with French doors and a roof that looks thatched – stands at one end of the space, where Devine and his partner, interior designer Thomas Burak, host friends for dinner on summer nights. At the opposite end sits a terrace where the couple drink their morning coffee and read the paper. These two spaces are linked by four raised, willow-trimmed beds filled with tidy rows of vegetables and flowers. The beds’ jewel-box chic is enhanced by Devine’s technique of “mirror planting,” so that the spacing of the rows in the right- and left-side beds lines up across the grass path that runs between them.




