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Garden Beet’s hanging chair range is about to explode with pumpkins, orbs and other Steve Myburgh metal garden work. The above shots are day 3 of Steve’s stand at Chelsea 2010. His sculptures are not fully experienced until your take the leap into the chair and feel the swing gently move. Most Chelsea visitors sit within and it makes them all very happy indeed.
The green walls made from woolly pockets are, of course, looking gorgeous. Providing a green oasis for the RHS Chelsea Gypsies and their music man.








Lovely chairs, I love Steve Myburgh metal garden work, in particular his Lily Swing. Id have one in my garden, if I had the money to splash out on one.
These are cool and nice garden accessories! I would like to have this for my father’s garden.
nice chairs perfect to a garden while reading books. it looks like a pumpkin !!
I helped to build and dismantle the Myburgh Designs stand in the trade section of the Chelsea Flower Show last year (2010). It was exciting, tiring, thrilling, scary, satisfying and nerve-racking too. I had contributed to it in a joint venture with Steve Myburgh. We built an opulent showman’s wagon designed as a room on wheels for the garden. This can be seen at http://www.jasperco.co.uk/gardenwagon.htm and versions can still be ordered. This year, for the first time in over a decade, there is no Myburgh stand at Chelsea. Having made copper swing seats that are priced in four and even five figures for many years Steve has found a new niche in something that is priced much lower. Copper poppies. Only photographs do justice to these extraordinary little works of art. They glow in the sunlight, make impromptu birdbaths when it rains and they never wilt. They can be added to any flower border for a talking point and artistic focus much like ideas found in extravagant designer gardens vying for medals at Chelsea, but the investment is tiny to achieve it.
really love the idea of hanging chairs, i can see myself hanging out in one those.