When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: rural king backyard gazebo designs

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 20 Gazebo Ideas for the Prettiest Backyard of All Time - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-gazebo-ideas-prettiest-backyard...

    Victorian-Style Gazebo. If gingerbread is more your flavor, take inspiration from the Victorians. This cheery painted gazebo, in Halifax Public Gardens in Nova Scotia, creates a cool oasis amid ...

  3. William Halfpenny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Halfpenny

    Plate 55, "The Elevation of a Chinese Gazebo", from Rural Architecture in the Chinese Taste, 1755, in which the word "gazebo" is first recorded in English The Coopers' Hall, Bristol, one of the largest and most certain attributions to Halfpenny The recreated Chinese Bridge at Croome Court, to Halfpenny's design Black Castle, Bristol, perhaps by Halfpenny

  4. Dreamy Gazebo Ideas To Transform Your Yard Into an Oasis - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-reasons-backyard-needs-gazebo...

    The best gazebo design ideas add shade and style to a yard or garden. You can re-create these gazebo designs with backyard landscaping, outdoor decor, and more.

  5. Gazebo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazebo

    A gazebo is a pavilion structure, sometimes octagonal or turret-shaped, often built in a park, garden, or spacious public area. [1] Some are used on occasions as bandstands . The name is also now used for a tent like canopy structure with open sides used as partial shelter from sun and rain at outdoor events.

  6. Wyntoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyntoon

    Over the 1943–1944 winter, with snow and ice transforming the outdoor scenery, Wyntoon hosted actor Clark Gable, film directors Louis B. Mayer and Raoul Walsh, columnist Louella Parsons, cartoonist Jimmy Swinnerton and his wife, aviator Charles Lindbergh and his family, the former president's daughter Anna Roosevelt and her husband John ...

  7. Folly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folly

    Sometimes they represented rustic villages, mills and cottages, to symbolise rural virtues. [1] Many follies, particularly during times of famine, such as the Great Famine in Ireland, were built as a form of poor relief , to provide employment for peasants and unemployed artisans.