About
A field guide for the yard you actually have.
Earthwork is a Pinterest-led landscape and garden magazine. Eight new ideas every morning, drawn from architects' sketchbooks, weekend-builder forums, and the boards that get saved most often.
Most of the home-design web is written for catalogue shoppers. We write for the homeowner standing at the back door with a coffee, looking at the yard, knowing something should change but not yet what. Curb appeal that holds up. A fire pit that gets used on a Friday night. A privacy hedge that screens the neighbour's deck without reading as a wall.
What you'll find here
37 hubs. Front yards, back yards, patios, paths, fire pits, raised beds, drought-tolerant plantings, sloped lots, the awkward strip beside the house. Every project lands in a hub, and every hub has the kind of specifics — cultivars, dimensions, dollar ranges — that turn a saved pin into a real Saturday plan.
Eight posts a day. Photo listicles for fast saves, design lookbooks for the longer browse, plant guides for the gardener picking from the catalogue, solution guides for the slope-and-shade problems. We publish across the spring-summer search wave and slow into the fall, then start building the archive again in January.
Honest affiliate links.When a post mentions a tool, plant, paver, or fixture, we link to where you can buy it. We earn a small commission on some of those links. We only recommend gear, plants, and materials we'd put in our own yards. Prices and stock change; check before you buy.
How we work
Each post starts in the editorial calendar — 720 posts mapped against the search waves landscaping searches actually follow. From there it goes through draft, fact-check, humanize, and a pre-publish review for accuracy on plant zones, dimensions, and any safety notes (pet-toxic plants, pesticides, power tools). Photographs come from a mix of location shoots and AI-assisted renders that we mark openly in the figure caption.
We don't run pop-ups, autoplay video, or affiliate interstitials. The page should load fast and the content should respect the time you gave it.
Get in touch
Project tips, photo submissions, corrections, partnership requests — everything routes through the contact page. We read every message, even when it takes us a few days to reply.