TREILLAGE AND IRONWORK 



171 



Where expense is no object, a garden adorned 

 with treillage architecture is a most desirable 

 addition to the grounds, and provides a beautiful and 

 quite harmonious variation to the other enclosures. 

 The woodwork can be varied, too, by wrought iron, 

 after the delightful models of the eighteenth century, 

 though the outlay is, of course, much increased, and 

 the painting and repair of the smith's craftsmanship 

 form a serious part of the general upkeep. 



Fig. 47. — Garden House of Treillage. 



