Posts Tagged ‘outdoor entertaining’

Outdoor Lighting For Your Late Summer Garden Party

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011
Outdoor Dining

Image from Sunset Magazine

If you read our recent post about what to do with summer garden glut, you no doubt have some great ideas for how to use your bountiful August harvest. But there is one important way to enjoy your fruits, veggies and herbs that we forgot to mention…throw a party! We just adore the idea of inviting over some pals on a warm summer evening to relax and savor the fruits of your labor. After all, isn’t just about anything more fun when you can share it with close friends?

For a late summer garden party, there is no need to stress over complicated recipes and decorations. It’s best to let your garden harvest speak for itself, and to find unfussy ways to let the fresh flavors shine through. Same goes for decor; your aim should be to keep it subtle and simple. And we think one of the easiest and least expensive ways to add ambiance to an outdoor space is with lighting– the right lighting certainly does make an impact and cast a memorable glow.

Three Simple Outdoor Lighting Options for Your Garden, Deck, or Patio

Lucie Hanging Votives (1) The Roost Lucie Hanging Votives: The unpretentious yet uncommon glass and metal design of the Lucie Hanging Votives is just right for complimenting an outdoor gathering. Just place a tealight or votive candle in each one, then hang them from the branches of a tree or the beams of an overhead garden arbor for a twinkling, starry look.

To use your patio umbrella for something other than shade, string the hanging votives underneath the open umbrella. For maximum effect, hang the votives together in clusters, or use them to create an overhead candle chandelier like they did here at MarthaStewart.com. You can choose your favorite design, or mix and match them: flare, tulip, or votive.

modern solar lanterns(2) Modern Solar Lanterns: We, of course, think the Soji Modern Solar Lanterns are cool. Really, really ridiculously cool. Why? Because they sort of fool the eye a little bit by appearing to be delicately folded paper lanterns, while in fact they are actually made of durable sheeted plastic. You can leave them hanging outside over your deck, garden, or patio, even in the rain!

Another bonus is that if you are looking for super easy no-maintenance outdoor lighting, this is it. All you have to do is hang them in a spot where they will receive direct sunlight during the day so that they can charge up. You don’t need to wire anything and you don’t need an outlet. They’ll then be ready to twinkle all evening from a tree branch or trellis. You can also consider hanging a solar lantern in a spot you want to call attention to during your garden party, such as over in an otherwise dark corner of the yard, where you have a pretty garden bench or bistro table.

More lighting options button

Recycled Bottle Lanterns(3) Roost Recycled Bottle Lanterns: The Recycled Bottle Lanterns are a new product that we are super excited about. They are awesome for both indoor and outdoor use. Like the hanging votives, they have a simple glass and metal design, which means they will match just about anything. Outdoors, the tealight will be protected from the summer breeze by the lantern’s recycled glass beer bottle body, and will make a great centerpiece for your picnic table.

Indoors, the lantern will add just the right balance of earthiness and glimmer to any room’s decor. Take a look at these photos at Once Upon a Tea Time to see how metal lanterns add a special to touch to both indoor and outdoor festivities. And don’t you love this living room design from Pure Green Magazine? See how the glass accents on the coffee table add just the right touch of sophistication to the room’s calm, clean appearance? Try grouping your recycled bottle lanterns with a Roost Glass Reed Vase filled with fresh cut China Asters for a similar look in your own living room.

Garden Rules Book

Keep Hornets From Crashing Your Picnic

Thursday, July 21st, 2011
Hornet on leaf

Image source: National Geographic

For us, hornets and spiders fall into the same category. This is because these bugs, while they can look somewhat creepy and intimidating, are actually beneficial. Both hornets and spiders devour flies, mosquitoes and other pesky insects. The white faced hornet, for example, loves to eat caterpillars and tomato worms, so it is a great natural defender for your vegetable garden.

But here’s the thing with hornets: while we know they’re beneficial, we don’t necessarily want them hanging around while we are trying to entertain on the patio or in the backyard. They do have stingers, and getting stung by a hornet is no laughing matter. We don’t want to kill the hornets – we just want to repel them away from our outdoor entertaining area and to another part of the yard. Here are some methods of doing just that.

Natural Ways to Repel Hornets

hose nossel with spraySpray down the nest. If you have a hornet nest in a high traffic area of your outdoor space, such as in the eaves of your front porch or in the corner of your deck, try forcing the hornets to relocate. Wait until evening, just before dark, when most of the hornets will be outside of the nest gathering food. Then, standing a safe distance away, spray the nest with a form blast of water from your hose. The hornets will not be killed, but it will knock down their nest and force them to build one in a different spot, hopefully further away from your entertaining space.

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Easy Flower Arranging for Outdoor Entertaining

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

When you’re throwing an outdoor garden party, create informal flower arrangements that compliment, rather than distract, from the surroundings. If you’re having a seated dinner, or small cocktail tables for guests to sit around, you also want to steer clear of towering (potentially unstable) arrangements. Bud vases provide easy floral design tools, and it’s quick and easy to create a pretty centerpiece.

We have a variety of bud vases in the aHa! Modern Living catalog, including our Glass Bird Vases, Cube Tube Vases, Jacks Vase, and the Windowsill Herb Holder. Here are a few ideas for each vase, and ideas for mixing these vases with other household containers.

Glass Bird Vases: These vases look best with delicate flowers and greens. Thin ornamental grass leaves, flax flowers, and other long-stemmed, delicate blooms look good in these birds.

Cube Tube Vases: You can display larger flowers in these sturdy vases. Their hard-edged lines are calling out for either 1) specimen flowers like a small sunflower on a short stem, a hydrangea, hybrid tea rose, or a large tuberous begonia or 2) wispy, floating ornamental grass stems, sprouting from the tubes in a cascading waterfall of greenery.

Windowsill Herb Holder: Use this vase to hold your edible centerpiece of garnishes. In each glass cup, place herbs that compliment the taste of your appetizers. Dill, basil and thyme are all different enough, and will highlight most savory dishes. Alternatively, you could place cut stems of mint, lavender, and pineapple sage as garnishes for sweet items and drinks. (See “Grow your own Garnishes,” below, for more garnish ideas.)

Mix and Match

The fun of flower arranging with bud vases is that you really can’t make a mistake. Go out to your garden and snip cuttings of anything that catches your eye. You could stick with a color theme (cool colors: blues, purples, greens or warm colors: reds, pinks, oranges, yellows), or a shape (spiky, round, daisy-shaped), or just cut a riot of colors and shapes.

Cut the flower stems at different lengths (though, none more than three times as tall as the container itself), and start putting them in vases and containers. Bud vases look best when mixed and matched together, along with other glasses, jars, and tumblers from around the house. Part of the fun is the mixing and matching. The space around the vases, once they are arranged in their final place before the party, is also part of the design. Draw attention to the group of vases by placing a large hosta leaf under several of the containers.

Most importantly, have fun with your arrangements. A grouping of bud vases is a chic and simple table arrangement, fitting for most garden parties.

Cultivate Your Style

So what’s your outdoor entertaining style?  Not sure?  For inspiration, check out these images of some of the best outdoor spaces. Notice the placement of flower arrangements and potted plants, and how different arrangements can create or add to the style and atmosphere of an outdoor patio.  We love the way simple additions of clipped or potted flowers, herbs, and succulents on or around outdoor tables can help to create a balanced, complete outdoor space fit for both entertaining and personal enjoyment.

Garden-Themed Outdoor Entertaining Tips

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010
Brazil 66 Cocktail and perfect ice cubes

More recipes at www.cocktalia.com

After you work so hard to create a beautiful garden, why not show it off with an outdoor cocktail party or get-together? There are endless ways to put together a fun event. Here are some of our tips for throwing a party that’s as fun for the guests as it is for the host.

  • Have plenty of ice on hand: When the weather warms up, never underestimate the ability of party guests to run through ice. You need ice for cooling drinks, putting in drinks, keeping food cold (shrimp, dips, cheeses—all benefit from sitting on a plate that’s sitting on ice). Designate one cooler/ice bucket for “clean ice” that goes in drinks, and keep extra bags in the freezer or other coolers.
  • Keep the food in the fridge until guests arrive: That means you’ll have to stage the food so that it is easy to reach and pop on the table. Put dips in their dishes, veggie platters together, and add serving spoons or forks to each before covering. Then, you can bring them out of the cold, put them on the table, and un-cover.
  • Serve only one “specialty drink” that can be mixed ahead: Nobody likes to be stuck behind the bar all night. Provide a range of drinks, including water, lemonade or tea, beer and wine, and one specialty mixed drink (if you like). Try to serve something that can be mixed ahead of time. Sangria, margaritas, daiquiris, and other “punch” concoctions will allow your guests and you to have fun.
  • Provide “bug-off” products: Depending upon how rowdy your guests get, how dry it is in your neck of the woods, and local open-flame ordinances, you might not want to have citronella-filled tiki torches all over your garden. There are plenty of natural “bug off” products, and synthetic products, as well. Place a little basket of these in your powder room so your guests can stay comfortable, even if mosquitoes are out in full force.