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  2. 40 Best Front Door Plant Ideas for Your Entryway - AOL

    www.aol.com/40-best-front-door-plant-212000264.html

    It's a low-maintenance beauty that is stunning set in planters on either side of your front door. Type of plant: Shrub, USDA zones 3 to 8 Best for: Full to part sun

  3. 25 Beautiful Outdoor Christmas Planter Designs - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/25-beautiful-outdoor...

    Ribbon-Wrapped Terra-Cotta Planters. A grouping of live trees potted in terra-cotta planters make the front steps feel festive and welcoming. Small bows and mini ornaments offer the finishing touches.

  4. Container garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Container_garden

    An ornamental planter at Regent's Park, Inner London, England. Containers range from simple plastic pots, to teacups, to complex automatically watered irrigation systems. This flexibility in design is another reason container gardening is popular with growers. They can be found on porches, front steps, and—in urban locations—on rooftops.

  5. Eastlake movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastlake_movement

    The entry to the living rooms are double pocket doors and the living room ceiling is surrounded with box molding and underneath it, a picture rail. The floor is a carpeted hardwood floor with a plain 12-inch baseboard and all other rooms contain the same floor and ceiling finishes with a few variations in the walls.

  6. Hollyhock House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollyhock_House

    Hollyhock carvings decorate this exterior planter. Hollyhock House was the first house in Los Angeles [10] [246] [143] and in Southern California designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. [247] It is also one of seven houses that Wright designed in Greater Los Angeles [248] [249] and the only one that is regularly open to the public. [250]

  7. Post and lintel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel

    Post and lintel (also called prop and lintel, a trabeated system, or a trilithic system) is a building system where strong horizontal elements are held up by strong vertical elements with large spaces between them. This is usually used to hold up a roof, creating a largely open space beneath, for whatever use the building is designed.