Environmental Studies
The natural world is the common denominator in Don Williams’s art, whether sculptural or functional.
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The natural world is the common denominator in Don Williams’s art, whether sculptural or functional.
For a very special farm-to-table lunch and a tour of beautiful gardens, visit Pickity Place in Mason.
Patty and Peter Cooke bought, saved and reinvented the iconic Pickering House on Main Street in Wolfeboro as a welcoming inn.
Although it helped provide inspiration for a classic murder-mystery game, the “Clue House” in Peterborough is bright, spacious and welcoming.
If you haven’t yet been there, put the historic Rundlet-May House in downtown Portsmouth on your list of places to visit this summer. Its gardens are splendid.
Celebrate the bicentennial of the New Hampshire State House in June.
Thanks to a creative team—lead by developer Jon Chorlian and architect John Jordan—a Concord house of worship gets rave reviews for its second act as home to ten families.
A whimsical small home transforms into a cozy winter wonderland.
The early-twentieth-century style of Prentice Sanger inspired architect Jeremy Bonin’s design of this welcoming home on Lake Sunapee.
Four Winds Farm in Peterborough is a multi-use property that pays fitting tribute to its owners’ legacy.
Noted for their beauty, Stephen Parrish’s early twentieth-century gardens in Cornish have been revived—thanks, in part, to the painter’s detailed journals.
Cook Liz Barbour of The Creative Feast creates beautiful— and delicious—dishes with what she grows.
The landmark Warner House in Portsmouth is the earliest building of its type in New England.
Manchester designer Vivian Beer gives her unique pieces of metal furniture a soft touch.
A classic Shingle-Style house becomes an architect’s home for the long term.