- Square coaster measuring 4.25" x 4.25", 1/6-inch thick
- Images are applied with a polyester resin that accepts dye as part of the coating
- Four felt pads protect your furniture from scratches
- Dishwasher safe
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Liven up any room or party and protect your surfaces with our distinctive tile coasters.
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Don't let any wine go to waste! Save some for later with fun and functional wine stoppers.
- Measures 4.25"" x 1.25""
- Weight: 2.3 oz.
- Chrome finish with black rubber ring
- Provides an air tight seal on most size bottles
- Great for wine, oil, vinegar and spirits
- Hand wash
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12x18 image in 18x24 gallery white mat signed by photographer
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Out of stockNow Sold Out and Out of Print. Used copies may be available Amazon. Collector's book - $500, autographed copies by John Greenlee and Saxon Holt. The American Meadow Garden; Published by Timber Press with John Greenlee as my writer. OK, OK most folks think I was John’s photographer, but if you are reading this you KNOW photographers get equal billing. Whoever’s book it is, I think we made a good team. The book won awards from The Garden Writers Association and The American Horticultural Society. It begins with a survey of natural meadows around the United States, showing the magnificent variety of meadows and grass ecologies that form the basis of any garden meadow. The book then profiles garden meadows in regions across the country from Chicago, St Louis, Albuquerque and Los Angeles and includes an encyclopedia of grasses. Read more on the Amazon order page.
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Out of stockNow Sold Out and Out of Print. A CD of the plant photographs in searchable database can be ordered here. The inspiration for the Summer-Dry book in the PhotoBotanic Learning Center, this beautiful 320-page book features more than 650 native Californian and Mediterranean plants photographed in garden settings. It showcases landscaping in summer-dry climates such as the West Coast of California and other Mediterranean regions of the world. If we are to promote sustainable garden practices in California and other summer-dry climates we need to change the aesthetic of what we expect to see in a garden photograph to give gardeners a new way of considering beauty in gardens.