The Winter/Holiday Season at Detroit Garden Works

on

|

views

and

comments

The Winter/Holiday Season at Detroit Garden Works

After an intensely re-imagined and heartfelt few weeks, all of the materials new and old we have available for winter and holiday expressions have been unboxed and put on display at the shop. Heartfelt? We work our collective hearts out to provide our clients with materials that recall, honor and celebrate the garden at year’s end. All 9600 square feet of it is stuffed to bursting with the beautiful, the whimsical, the traditional, the unusual –  the satisfying and joyous signs of the winter and holiday gardening season on the way.

It was probably better than 25 years ago that Rob and I started shopping, collecting, and offering for sale materials suitable for winter arrangements for pots and containers. All of these materials – whether an astonishingly convincing replica of the real plant or flower,  a collection of various fresh cut twigs and greens, or innovative lighting – have the potential to keep the hope and memory of the garden alive during our long winter season. What we have available in the shop today is as good as our experience and and will to celebrate gardening can provide. You’ll see.

Up next is a pictorial version of the shop, dressed, decked out, and ready for the season. If you are too far to make the trip, we want to share what we have the best we can. If you are close enough, we invite you to come and see what’s doing in person.

What could possibly be more forlorn and pathetic to a gardener than empty garden pots, or a landscape gone dark and dreary at year’s end?Finding a reason to celebrate seems like a much better idea. We intend to provide the chance to help keep the gardening season open and thriving all year round, in spite of the untoward winter weather and dark. If you see anything here that interests or intrigues you enough to inquire further, we are available.

1  248  335  8089

webinquiry@detroitgardenworks.com


Share this
Tags

Must-read

Bountiful Blooms: 7 Easy Flowers to Succession Plant

We’ve often discussed succession planting vegetable crops like sweet corn, zucchini, and bush beans to avoid gluts and shortages here on the blog, but...

Learn How to Grow Candytuft (Iberis)

Fertilizer Candytufts are average feeders that require little additional fertilization when grown in moderately rich soil. Perennials benefit from a one- to two-inch top dressing of...

Austin homes on 2026 Tribeza Interiors Tour, Part 4: Chateau Chloe

March 05, 2026 Today in Part 4 of my 2026 Tribeza Interiors Tour recap, I’m showing the wonderfully wild Chateau Chloe. From the outside, it...

Recent articles

More like this

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here