When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: making concrete planters at home decor

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Get Creative With Your Houseplants by Using These DIY Planters

    www.aol.com/houseplants-life-diy-planters...

    Painted Cinder Block Planters. Transform cinder blocks from mundane to fun-dane with stencils and colorful paint.They make the perfect home for your outdoor plants. Plus, they won't blow over in ...

  3. Flowerpot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flowerpot

    A flowerpot, planter, planterette or plant pot, is a container in which flowers and other plants are cultivated and displayed. Historically, and still to a significant extent today, they are made from plain terracotta with no ceramic glaze , with a round shape, tapering inwards.

  4. Garden ornament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_ornament

    Concrete Aboriginal: a lawn ornament once common in Australia. Concrete goose: a popular lawn ornament in the United States. A front lawn featuring an International Truck is an example of "found object art". Elephant ears and sunflowers were purposely planted to adorn the antique farm equipment on this US lawn.

  5. Hypertufa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertufa

    A hand-shaped planter made of hypertufa. Aggregates are generally Sphagnum (peat moss), sand, and perlite or vermiculite. [1] Coconut coir is coming to take the place of sphagnum moss, as the latter is a very slowly renewing natural resource and the former is a ready byproduct of the coconut industry— it has all the advantages of the moss but without the environmental costs.

  6. 20 Stores like Anthropologie to Shop Right Now

    www.aol.com/17-stores-anthropologie-shop-now...

    Nowadays there are many more brands and multi-retailers that are similar to Anthro, for both clothing and home decor, such as Tuckernuck, Free People, Farm Rio, Serena and Lily and Urban ...

  7. Eldren Bailey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eldren_Bailey

    This "decor" conversed with Bailey's sense of the early Christian habitations of the catacombs of Rome (two plaster fish were sculpted into his laundry room's ceiling) and his interest in the legacies of those lost civilizations known only through their tombs or caves. Many of the utilitarian furnishings inside his home continued this theme.