WINDOW
GARDENING.—NO.
IV.
BY run “IIORTICULTURAL EDITOR."
A nannsomn, yet cheap, vase may be made, ‘few lines of gold color, and to be highly var for the window, like those seen in the pair of i nishcd. The glass panels, which need only he stands and vases placed on either side of the y common crown glass, about two feet high by ten Minton-Palissy vase and stand in our illustra- i inches wide, would cost a mere trifle at the pre tion. They are merely wooden frames—such as sent low price of that article; and the ornament may be made by any ordinary carpenter—with E is, of course, supposed to be supplied by the in glass panels, ornamented by the well-known pro- i genious floricultural amateur. In case the reader cess now termed "Potiehomanie." The wooden E may not. know the process by which glass is now frame is intended to be painted white, with ai so frequently ornamented, as described, the fol
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