Protea Mucronifolia (Dagger–Leaf Protea) (1806) Image from The Botanical Magazine or Flower Garden Displayed by Francis Sansom.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Convolvulus Pink Mayflower from Poets in the Garden published by T. Fisher Unwin (1886).. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Washington Lily (Lilium washingtonianum) (1933) by Mary Vaux Walcott.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Shewy stenactis from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Tall calotropis from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Two-colored collinsia from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Gloxinia flower varieties from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
The tangier pea from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Wine-stained godetia from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Bell-bearing heath from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Lilac hibiscus from Edwards’s Botanical Register (1829—1847) by Sydenham Edwards, John Lindley, and James Ridgway.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
almost 3 years
Irises (1897) by Sientje Mesdag-van Houten.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
about 3 years
Tree Peony, hand–colored collotype from Some Japanese Flowers (1896) by Kazumasa Ogawa.. Free illustration for personal and commercial use.
about 3 years