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  2. The Best Landscape Edging Options for Your Lawn and Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-landscape-edging...

    The 12-gauge edging is strong enough to hold up to bumps from lawn equipment and comes in lengths ranging from 20 to 300 feet long. Pro tip: Set the edging out in the sun for better flexibility ...

  3. Don't Skip This Finishing Touch for Your Garden Beds! - AOL

    www.aol.com/create-beautiful-garden-bed...

    Without edging, your garden beds look unfinished. Garden edging also serves a functional purpose by keeping grasses, many of which spread, out of your beds. A sharp edge between grass and planting ...

  4. Concrete landscape curbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concrete_landscape_curbing

    Concrete landscape curbing (or concrete landscape bordering) is an alternative to plastic or metal landscape edging. Landscape curbing is made with various elements of concrete depending on the climate where it is being used. [1] Concrete landscape curbing has become more popular over the last decade with suppliers offering a variety of styling ...

  5. Rubber mulch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_mulch

    Rubber mulch typically consists of waste tire bits or nuggets of synthetic rubber obtained from tires that have been shredded or ground up whole, with their steel bands removed. This process can involve the use of various types of tires, including those from passenger vehicles, large trucks , and trailers .

  6. Molding (decorative) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molding_(decorative)

    At their simplest, mouldings hide and help weather seal natural joints produced in the framing process of building a structure. As decorative elements, they are a means of applying light- and dark-shaded stripes to a structural object without having to change the material or apply pigments.

  7. Shrubbery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrubbery

    A shrubbery, shrub border or shrub garden is a part of a garden where shrubs, mostly flowering species, are thickly planted. [1] The original shrubberies were mostly sections of large gardens, with one or more paths winding through it, a less-remembered aspect of the English landscape garden with very few original 18th-century examples surviving.