David Carter Interior Design can be contacted on 0171 790 0258 or by fax on 0171 790 0259 Seng Watson is available for
David Carter Interior Design can be contacted on 0171 790 0258 or by fax on 0171 790 0259 Seng Watson is available for commissions on 0958 579775. The Complete Paint Book is published by Conran Octopus, priced pounds 20.. Madonna key rings, pounds 1.50 each, glitter religious stick-on badges, pounds 5 each, pastel-rose rosaries, pounds 2.50 each, all from Emma Bernhardt, 301 Portobello Road, London W10, 0181 960 2929
Woodgrain-effect paper, 99p per sheet from Paperchase, 213 Tottenham Court Road, London WC1, 0171 580 8496
Various metal handles and drawer knobs, pounds 33 each, all from Haute Deco, 556 Kings Road, London SW6, 0171 736 7171. Key tassels, gold and tapestry pounds 15.95, green pounds 17, from VV Rouleaux, 19 Symons Street, London SW3, 0171 730 3125. Growing together, one among the other, against a house or garden wall, this combination will be attractive every day of the year, with the added bonus that all the plants will grow on walls that get no sun at all. The climbing hydrangea, Hydrangea petiolaris, is helpfully self-supporting, its branches clinging by means of aerial roots, in much the same way as ivy does.
It can be a little slow at first, being wary of putting on too much growth before it has a really firm hold, so it is wise to secure it a little during its first few seasons. After that, it romps away unaided, easily covering any vertical space you care to place in its path.
Its light-green, oval leaves are toothed and slightly curled and turn a buttery yellow in the autumn. Its flat, lace-cap flowers are creamy white and appear from June in trusses up to 8in across. They fade to brown, becoming dry, papery clusters that last well after the summer’s end.In the winter, the hydrangea is no less attractive for its branches, which soon become handsomely twisted and gnarled, and rich mahogany in colour, covered in bark which splits and peels. In February, as soon as there is some hint that a new season is just around the corner, these beautiful branches are covered in bright, fresh-green leaf-buds.The familiar winter jasmin, Jasminum nudiflorum, is a thoroughly hardy plant that will also grow without sun.
The hydrangea will provide an excellent support for its tumbling, whip-like, green stems, and a foil for the welcome, bright-yellow flowers that appear throughout the depths of winter It will need a little more attention than the hydrangea. Recently flowered shoots should be cut back to within 2in to 3in of their base, and some of the oldest stems should then be removed completely. If it gets very untidy and really out of hand, cut it back as hard as you like.The hydrangea’s summer foliage can easiy protrude 3ft from the wall and, in a narrow border, anything planted too close will be swamped and shaded. The English bluebell, Hyacinthoides non-scripta, with its blue, scented, bell-shaped flowers, would be ideal in this position (as would many spring- flowering bulbs), for it puts out its leaves and flowers before the climbers have achieved much growth.Three plants that look good together:Hydrangea petiolarisJasminum nudiflorumHyacinthoides non-scripta. First there was Tom & Jerry, the story of a cat and a mouse.
Then there was Tom and Viv, the story of a poet and his first wife Now along comes Tom & Clem, the story of an MP and a PM. The imaginary encounter at the 1945 Potsdam Conference between Tom Driberg, Express gossip columnist, homosexual, ex-communist and MP, and Clement Attlee, the dauntingly uncharismatic Prime Minister, might seem a natural subject for Alan Bennett or Simon Gray. The part of Driberg himself could have been written by either of them for Alan Bates. As it is, the author of this new West End play, Stephen Churchett, is an actor, making his playwrighting debut.
