A Judith Doner Berne Special to the Jewish News Photographs by Angie Baan A16 May1.2008 rchitect Frank Lloyd Wright was known for blurring the distinc- tion between interior space and the surrounding terrain, which he accom- plished by bringing the outside in. Ellen Stone, a psychotherapist who once aspired to be a designer, has the same agenda, but accomplishes it by taking the inside out of doors. When she tires of her objets d'art or they must be moved to make room for new ones, they often are sent outside. "A lot of the things that I've outgrown from the house come outside she says, pointing to a large sculpture mounted on an outside wall. Stone is a native Detroiter, who gradu- ated Kingswood Cranbrook in Bloomfield Hills and received her undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Michigan. Her house and garden, tucked away at the end of a West Bloomfield road, reflect her individualism and ever-changing tastes. "I know nothing about landscaping:' says Stone, who is with Comprehensive Psychiatric Services in Farmington Hills. As you approach her sheltered front door, signs on wood and stitched onto pillows greet you with "Gone to Therapy" and "No Whining." Yet a sign on her front gate, one of many that pervade her yard and home, pronounces, "Garden Diva Hard at Work." It was a gift from a West Bloomfield neigh- bor, Sandy Wormser. You would be hard pressed to discover that Stone's house, now distinguished by a columned driveway and flagstone facade, once was a traditional tri-level built in the 1980s by Pulte Homes. "It isn't even a reflection of me now',' she says, "because I'm ever changing. I've redone everything a million times." Themes of stripes, circles and hearts in her home make their way into the garden. Inside, stripes are in vogue even on the ceiling, circles can be seen in mirrors and on her many stained glass windows, and heart-shapes are evident in many media, even to a heart-shaped bed. Outside, they may take the forms of horizontal fencing and wrought-iron arbors, mirrors and painted bowling balls, and hanging hearts of glass and metal. And, as those pieces take root, in much the same way a new plant would, she adds both landscaping and more art to compli- ment and complete. She got rid of a lot of routine shrubs, planting them in a neighbor's yard, and turned to more dramatic plantings. She removed grass in favor of pebbles, stone pathways and a dry rock stream. And she used art rather than nature for color.