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Article Title: An Overview Of Wrought Iron In The Landscape
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: 
Word Count: 506
Keywords: Wrought Iron
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Wrought iron is an elegant addition to landscape design. It can be used in a 
beautifully functional way or purely for decoration. Wrought iron makes a 
strong statement when used as a garden gate, a grill insert in a fence, a 
balcony railing or an impressive front door. As decoration, it can accent porch 
columns, showcase an outdoor water fountain and adorn a garden gazebo.

You will find a remarkable variety of artistic motifs done in decorative iron, 
from the refined figuration of the Renaissance to the sensual and sinuous 
designs of Art Nouveau. Both intricate and graceful, it creates an eloquent 
vocabulary in your landscape and expresses our individuality.

In its functional usage, decorative iron is most often used for security and 
privacy. In fact, there are those design professionals who believe that, 
because it is a strong material, it works best where it displays its intrinsic 
strength.

Ornamental iron fences, driveway gates or window balconies are just a few of 
iron's utilitarian purposes. The beauty of iron, however, is that by adding the 
small decorative details, such as dainty flowers or pleasing trefoils, the 
ordinary and practical become extraordinary.

For aesthetic purposes, however, iron is limited only by your imagination. A 
decorative iron chandelier in an outdoor kitchen. Accent pieces on doors, such 
as knobs, door knockers, locks and hinges. Garden arches. Friezes, copings and 
finials. Garden arbors. 

One design note: while decorative iron enhances any landscape, it needs to work 
with the extant motifs. A gate done in an Italian design from the Rococo period 
doesn't work well with a Colonial style house, for example. So use 
discrimination when picking the design of your choice.

>From an historic perspective, true wrought iron is only made in small 
>quantities today and primarily for preservation projects. Most steel products 
>found in modern landscaping materials are made of mild steel which has the 
>advantage of being relatively inexpensive to produce and easy to manipulate. 

The old nomenclature still applies, though, because the modern steel 
balustrades, balconies and flower boxes (and a hundred other landscape items 
you could name) retain the original look handed down to us from the Middle 
Ages. As does our delight in this stalwart substance.

Perhaps Samuel Yellin, the Polish-born iron artisan and blacksmith of the early 
20th century, best describes our enthusiasm for wrought iron. He arrived in 
Philadelphia in 1906 and his work was eventually commissioned across the 
country. It can be found in nearly 40 states. 

He said, "I love iron. It is the stuff of which the frame of the earth is made. 
And you can make it say anything you will. It eloquently responds to the hand, 
at the bidding of the imagination. When I go to bed at night, I can hardly 
sleep because my mind is aswarm with all the visions of gates and grilles and 
locks and keys I want to do. I verily believe I shall take my hammer with me 
when I go to the gate of heaven. If I am denied admission, I shall fashion my 
own key."

Jeff Halper has a passion for landscaping and landscape design, for more 
information about landscaping and gardening visit http://www.exteriorworlds.com
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