The ruins at Nymans and a peek inside the house

I’ve already shared some photos of the foggy garden on our visit to Nymans last month, but there was more to our visit than this. And even though we weren’t there too long - it was pretty chilly - I did get a chance to admire the ruins and pop into the house for a warm up, which is where I spotted my new room crush. The fog does give the ruins a slightly ethereal quality.

A grand facade at Nymans

The green bushes and the terracotta pots though.

palms and ruins

I was smitten before I even saw the topiary.

the gable in the fog with benches and topiary

It’s quite a view isn’t it, and it’s all the detail. The symmetry, the details on the benches. And the dovecote, in the walled garden.

A dovecote in the garden wall
A tree in the fog with topiary

This is definitely a garden I want to visit when the weather’s better. But the advantage of visiting on a chillier day was that the fire was lit in the house, not the ruins, and it was lovely and toasty. It was, like many of the National Trust properties, beautifully presented and in such a way that you could easily imagine it being yours, even just for a moment.

inside the house a piano
letters on the table in the hall

The upstairs though was quite different. It served as an exhibition space, but what caught my eye was this lighting above the stairwell. It has a modern feel, but wasn’t out of place in the house.

a more modern light at the top of the stairs
A hinge in the shape of a K?

And then, with a turn of the corner we were back to the more historic. Who wouldn’t love hinges like that?