|
|
|
Honey-beige Blocks Uninteresting: If you are laying a large area, it pays to use two colors, checkerboard fashion, to avoid monotony. For instance, although gray and honey-beige blocks uninteresting blocks are uninteresting if used by themselves over a large area, when combined they can look very attractive. However, be careful in your use of combined colors.
• These are now the most commonly used materials for hard surfacing in the garden.
• Prefabricated cement blocks are available in a vast range of colors and textures.
• They vary in shape from the 2 x 2ft common gray block to polygonal and
circular forms; most of them are 2in thick or less.
• More expensive types are made of reconstituted stone, and you can even find them in a texture that has the appearance of water-worn stone.
• It is important to make sure that the surface finish is non-slip: a smooth finish encrusted with algae can be treacherous in wet weather.
Honey and sugar syrups have long been used in medicine to help disguise the bitterness of herbal remedies. This is still a common practice and mixtures containing honey and lemon are often taken to ease the symptoms of colds and influenza. Less common is the production of an alcoholic drink from honey.
In the 1960's, ranchers in the United States, Canada, and Scandinavia—the three largest mink-producing areas—were marketing nearly SO different shades, although more than 100 had been leveloped. The basic colors, each of which has nany variations in shade and cast, are standard lark, brown, light brown, silverblu, sapphire, junmetal, pale gray, pale beige, lavender beige, fray taupe, pale brown, and white. In recent years,pale beige types with pink and olive casts also have been developed. The gradations in shade within the color phases are known as stewart and breath-of-spring.
|
|
|