Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed

Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed

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I can’t stand most of spring. I much prefer the bitterness of January or blistering heat of July, where at least you know what you’re getting, rather than the hot and cold of March in New England. But I might change my mind if I had an inviting indoor-outdoor garden shed in the English countryside like UK blogger Jeska Hearne and her husband Dean. In it, I would wait out the month with a cup of tea and the floor-to-ceiling doors open or closed, depending.

The Hearnes, who also run online housewares shop The Future Kept, call it their tea (or “G&T”) shed at the bottom of their countryside garden: “In the day I love to brew up a cup (or pot if I have visitors) on the old stove and read my current book, or snooze with the sounds of the neighborhood in summer as a lullaby. In the evenings we love to wander down again and have a gin and tonic while all the insects buzz about at sunset,” Jeska says. Here’s a look inside this very English garden escape.

Photography courtesy of Jeska Hearne.

Above: The shed is tucked away at the bottom of the garden at the Hearne’s East Sussex home.

Though it looks well-lived-in, the structure is only a year old: Jeska used a pre-built shed with accordion glass doors (for more information, see Walton’s) and painted it in Bedec Eco Barn Paint in black, “a nod to the famous fishing huts of Hastings.” She plans on adding a window to the cupboard (at left) to transform it into an easy-access potting shed; for now, it hides the lawnmower.

inside, a mix of textures and layers, and a creeping vine overhead. Above: Inside, a mix of textures and layers, and a creeping vine overhead.

“We wanted the feel of an old, rustic, pulled-together shanty, using handmade decoration throughout,” Jeska says. Case in point: the low daybed, which she built from five recycled apple crates topped with a memory foam mattress. The couple pulls it inside during the winter to protect it from dampness.

vintage finds and spare cushions line one wall of the shed, which the couple covered in reclaimed wood. Above: Vintage finds and spare cushions line one wall of the shed, which the couple covered in reclaimed wood. pelargoniums in mix-and-match containers benefit from the floor-to-ceiling windows. Above: Pelargoniums in mix-and-match containers benefit from the floor-to-ceiling windows. the shed has no running water, but a water-saving system catches rainwater from the roof. Above: The shed has no running water, but a water-saving system catches rainwater from the roof.

To water the houseplants, Jeska “dips into that with a hand-held watering can once a week;” she uses this UK-made copper watering can by Haws.

jeska layered the daybed with colorful mix-and-match textiles, including pillows covered in floral tana lawn cotton fabric. Above: Jeska layered the daybed with colorful mix-and-match textiles, including pillows covered in floral Tana Lawn cotton fabric. for a been-there-forever english garden shed look, jeska clad one interior wall in found boards. Above: For a been-there-forever English garden shed look, Jeska clad one interior wall in found boards.

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Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed

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Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed

Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed
Tea and Comfort: A Very English Garden Shed
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