Linaria-like Salvia (Salvia linarioides). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Mexican Tulip Poppy. Hunnemannia fumariifolia. Annales de flore et de pomone (1835-1836)-2. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Red-flowering currant (1835). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Scarlet Gilia. Gilia coronopifolia. Edwards’s Botanical Register, vol. 20 (1835) [S.A. Drake]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Elephant yam. Amorphophallus paeoniifolius [as Amorphophallus campanulatus] Blume, C.L., Rumphia, vol. 1 (1835). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Adenia obtusa, as Modecca obtusa. Blume, C.L., Rumphia, vol. 1 (1835). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Rose 'Mme. Caroline Testout' (1894). Named after a French dressmaker, bred by Joseph Pernet-Ducher. An early hybrid tea, it was the most popular rose of its time.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Armenian Cranesbill. Geranium psilostemon. The garden. An illustrated weekly journal of horticulture in all its branches: vol. 11 (1877).. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Iris. John Lewis Childs, Inc. (1892). Fall bulbs that bloom plants that please, berries that bear.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Marumia muscosa. A climbing shrub up to 50 or more feet tall. Native to Java. Blume, C.L., Rumphia: vol. 1 (1835). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Blue Anemone. Anemone apennina. Early spring blue flowers above fern-like foliage. Perennial. (1894). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Clusia rosea. Autograph plant, pitch apple. Scratch a name on a leaf, it will remain there for the life of the leaf.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Downy Azalea (Rhododendron molle) The garden. An illustrated weekly journal of horticulture in all its branches, vol. 11 (1877).. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Avocado. Persea-americana [as Persea gratissima] Native to Mexico and Central America. First evidence of it use found in a cave in Coxcatlán, Puebla, Mexico, and dated to 10,000 B.C. The avocado, like the banana, is botanically a berry. (1889). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Meadow buttercup. Ranunculus acris. Widely distributed now, it is most likely native in Alaska and Greenland. Svensk botanik [J.W. Palmstruch et al], vol. 6 (1809). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Trailing indigo. Indigofera hendecaphylla. A popular and showy cover crop, it controls erosion, smothers weeds, and fixes nitrogen. Native to Asia and Africa. Botanical Register, vol. 10- (1824) [M. Hart]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
New South Wales waratah. Telopea speciosissima. Large shrub in the Proteaceae family. Endemic to New South Wales, Australia. It is the floral emblem of that state.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Sobralia xantholeuca. Bamboo-like canes hold large, Cattleya-like flowers. Repeat blooms. A cool weather, summer blooming orchid from Mexico and Guatamala. The garden. An illustrated…, vol. 22 (1882). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Iris planifolia. A 6 inch tall winter blooming iris. The garden. An illustrated weekly journal of horticulture in all its branches [ed. William Robinson], vol. 14: t. 156, fig. 1 (1878). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Willowleaf Angelonia. Angelonia salicariifolia. Sweetly fragrant, Snapdragon-like flowers on 2 foot perennials. Highly valued for both ease of growth and fragrance. Herbier général de l’amateur, vol. 8 (1817-1827) [P. Bessa]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years