Clown orchid, tiger orchid. Rossioglossum grande [as Odontoglossum grande]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
11 months
Verbascum phoeniceum, Coreopsis lanceolata, Ledum palustre, and Campanula persicifolia [as Campanula pumila]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Cattleya bicolor. For a cattleya, flowers are long lasting. Lindenia - iconography of orchids vol. 2-3 (1891-1892). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Iris iberica Steven- Curtis's botanical magazine s.3 v.26 (1870). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
channelled boat-lip orchid (Cymbidium canaliculatum).. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Delphinium nudicaule Torrey & A. Gray -Curtis's botanical magazine s.3 v.26 (1870)). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Antigonon leptopus Hook. & Arn. Curtis's botanical magazine s.3 v.26 (1870). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Hibbertia scandens. Guinea Gold Vine. (1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Hardenbergia perbrevidens (1830). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Mountain sage (Salvia regla). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Hasselt's Dendrobium. Dendrobium hasseltii. Honey scented flowers in late summer and fall. Grows in moss at altitudes of 5,000 to 10,000 feet in the mountain forests of Sumatra, Java and Malaysia. By Sarah Ann Drake (1847). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Japan lily. Lilium speciosum [as L. speciosum punctatum] Flowers extremely fragrant. Plants native to Japan at elevations from 2,000-3,000 feet. Album van Eeden. Harlem's Flora, door A.C. Van Eeden & Co. (1872). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Black tree fern, or mamaku in the Maori language. Cyathea medullaris. Black trunks topped with giant fronds to 5 meters long. Grows to 20 m high. Native to the south-west Pacific from Fiji to New Zealand. Garden ferns (1862). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Single Chrysanthemums. La botanique de J.J. Rousseau tures de P.J. Redouté. (1805). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Guarianthe skinneri [as Cattleya skinneri] The national flower of Costa Rica, it is called "Guaria Morada." Grows on trees and rocks at moderate elvetations, in humid forests. Illustration by Agusta Innes Withers.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Rossioglossum insleayi [as Oncidium insleayi] Fragrant, bright, bicolor, 3-4 inch flowers, in fall and winter. Epiphytic orchid native to Mexico's oak and pine forests. Illustration by Sarah Ann Drake. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Dendrobium anosmum (as Dendrobium macrophyllum). Powerfully fragrant lavender flowers, spotted burgundy on sides of lip. Bloom is in early spring, each pseudobulb can produce 100 flowers. ). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Lungwort, Common lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis) and Golden shower tree, purging Cassia (Cassia fistula) The American flora by Asa B. Strong, vol. 1 (1855). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Red corn poppy, Shirley poppy. Papaver rhoeas. Here on the West Coast, Shirley poppies bloom early. For me, their bright, cheerful faces are the harbingers of spring. The American flora by Asa B.. Strong, vol. 1 (1855). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Stately Silphium, prairie dock. Silphium terebinthinaceum. Perennial plants form green buds which unfold into large, yellow, attractive flowers. Grows up to 9 feet tall, with leaves 18 inches long and 1 foot wide. The American flora, volume 4 (1855). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
European peony, common peony. Deep red flowers, 4-5 inches across in late spring. First grown as a medicinal plant, in time became popular oranmental. The American flora by Asa B.. Strong, vol. 1 (1855). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Meriania purpurea. Native to the higher elevations of Caribbean Islands. Tussac, F.R., Flore des Antilles, (1808). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Breadseed poppy. Papaver somniferum [as Papaver amoenum] Annales de flore et de pomone ser.2 vol.2 (1843-1844). 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
Cattleya grandis [as Laelia grandis]. Yellow and bronze, ruffled petals. White lip is striped purple. Lives in top branches of very tall trees (80 feet+). This ensures plants get plenty of sun. Native to Brazil.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Heliconia indica. A striking foliage plant to 12 feet tall. Flowers pollinated by bats and hummingbirds. Native to many islands in the South Pacific (1880). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Poppy anemone. Anemone coronaria. Hortus Romanus juxta Systema Tournefortianum, by Bonelli, Giorgio, vol. 5 (1783-1816). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Poppy anemone. Anemone coronaria. Hortus Romanus juxta Systema Tournefortianum, Bonelli, Giorgio, vol. 5 (1783-1816). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Petunias, Double Mix. (1858). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Single (yellow) dahlia by P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
European peony by P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Rosier de Candolle by P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Red currant. Ribes rubra. By P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Peach. By P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Plum 'Royale'. Prunus domestica. By P.J. Redouté (1827-1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Pineapple lily. Eucomis regia. Bulbous perennnial from South Africa. Forms basal rosettes of leaves with thick stems covered in chartreuse, star shaped flowers. Redouté, P.J., (1807). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Hepatica, liverwort, kidneywort, pennywort. Anemone hepatica. Late winter, and spring flowering perennial. Grows in deep shade, or full sun. Heavy or sandy soils. Needs moisture and winter snow cover. Herbier general de l'Amateur, vol. 1 (1816). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Grenadille a Grappes. Passiflora racemosa. Herbier General de l'Amateur, vol.6 (1822) [P. Bessa]. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Passion Flower. Passiflora x decaisneana. Large, 4-5 inch flowers followed by orange, edible fruit. These fast growing vines are often confused with P. quadrangularis. Deutsches Magazin für Garten- und Blumenkunde; Stuggart, G. Weise. (1854). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years
Tulip. Tulipa gesneriana. Choix des plus belles fleurs -et des plus beaux fruits par P.J. Redouté. (1833). Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
over 2 years