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Building a fairy garden is a delightful way to explore an imaginary world with your children. With just a few household and gardening items — and a belief in the magic of fairies — together ...
When such miniature decorations are paired with similarly diminutive plants, these gardens — aimed at luring fairies — can captivate the imaginations of children and adults alike.
Itsy-bitsy fairy gardens are creating a huge horticultural trend. Imagine a Lilliputian landscape brimming with enchantment. In fairy garden scale, a miniature fence has slats the size of a pinkie ...
It was a cracked flower pot four years ago that prompted Sandra Killough to make her first fairy garden at Bonnie’s Greenhouse.
Evelyn Robitaille, 5, of Greene, looks up on Saturday to check the spelling of "Fairy Garden" on the sign she's making out of popsicle sticks during the Annual Fairy Festival at Longfellow's ...
Fairy gardening is about more than creating tiny, whimsical gardens with intricate details. For many, it’s a way to connect with loved ones of all ages and let your imagination run wild ...
Yet, fairy gardens also can take on more solemn meanings. The 15-foot-wide fairy garden on the side of Michelle Peebles’ home commemorates her daughter Amanda, who died at age 12 from ...
One of gardening's hottest new twists is building fairy gardens -- wee settings that are turning out to be popular with more than just mommies and daughters.
Fairy gardens - hidden beneath stout trees at botanical gardens, or proudly displayed on tabletops at garden centers and in homes - are captivating the imaginations of children and adults ...
Fairy gardening — the creation of playful gardens designed to attract fairies — have been a popular gardening trend for a few years, said Annette Jackson, of Jackson’s Greenhouse and Garden ...
Fairy gardens -- hidden at the base of a tree, next to a stack of rocks, tucked inside an old birdbath or proudly displayed on tabletops -- are captivating the imaginations of children and adults ...