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Product Description Topiary and the Art of Training Plants is a complete guide to the art and craft of creating increasingly popular and surprisingly low-maintenance decorative garden effects. With clear advice and step-by-step illustrations, this book provides a wealth of ideas, including how to: sculpt topiary shapes, from balls and pyramids to animals and abstracts, for year-round decorative effect rejuvenate neglected trees, shrubs and hedges train fruit trees into espaliers, fans, cordons and festoons train climbers and twiners to make fragrant, colorful arches and arbors create patterns for hedges and knot gardens train plants into standards shape easy mock topiary for quick results Topiary and the Art of Training Plants also includes: garden plans showing how to incorporate topiary into beds, borders and whole gardens an extensive plant directory a North American zone map a directory of North American sources to locate plants suitable for topiary more than 120 full color photographs and 60 watercolor illustrations. Beautiful, inspiring and comprehensive, Topiary and the Art of Training Plants is a practical gardening guide with the information and value to make it a favorite of gardeners everywhere. From Library Journal In this guide, gardening writer Joyce focuses on the use of topiaries and other ornamentally trained plants as garden design elements. In addition to aesthetic recommendations, the book offers technical information such as step-by-step illustrations for creating plant sculptures and landscape plans. Although this title--previously published in a U.K. edition--has been adapted to appeal to a North American audience (for example, the appendix includes lists of plant and tool sources in the United States and Canada), all but one of the photographs feature topiaries, hedges, and standards in European gardens. This bias is regrettable, given the notable tradition of ornamental pruning as practiced at Pennsylvania's Longwood Gardens and other public gardens in North America. Recommended for large horticultural collections as an optional supplement to more practical works, such as Joyce's Complete Guide to Pruning and Training Plants (S. & S., 1992. o.p.). -Brian Lym, City Coll. Lib. of San Francisco Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review This seductively illustrated and photographed book is full of clever ideas for adding geometry and structure to the garden, as well as being a detailed manual on how to prune. (Valerie Easton Seattle Times/Post Intelligencer 2000-09-10) Joyce's handbook offers an instructive tour that will surely fire up the imagination of keen gardeners. (Alice Joyce Booklist 2000-03-15) Technical information such as step-by-step illustrations for creating plant sculptures and landscape plans. (Brian Lym Library Journal 2000-05-01) Turn greenery into living sculpture ... concise directions for creating basic geometric patterns or elaborate ivy ponies, chickens and bunnies. ( People Magazine 2000-04-17) An interesting instruction manual on how to get just about anything out of a willing shrub. From simple geometric shapes to whimsical animals, everything is here. Need to get rid of stress? Take up boxing. Want to trim some bushes and get stunning results? Read this book. (Susan Banks Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 2000-03-04) The book describes the how-to of plant sculpture and offers practical tips for rejuvenating neglected trees, shrubs and hedges. ( Birmingham News 2000-03-12) Training is half the battle ... David Joyce does a wonderful job of teaching about shaping, training and caring for trees and shrubs, so you get exactly the effect you want. (Linda Turk Thunder Bay Chronicle Journal 2000-04-11) Clipping yews into obelisks and boxwoods into pyramids is mere child's play compared to some of the more astounding creatures in "Topiary and the Art of Training Plants." The living sculptures in this book may prompt you to pick up hand shears and snip