Garden horticulture Wall Art

300 creative works found

  • Comfrey Leaves / Lake Leland, Washington. USA / Photoshop CS3

  • Waxy white beauty berries (Callicarpa species) ripening on a slender branch. Nature hedges her bets, not allowing all the seeds in the berries to ripen at once. Where one seed may fail, a later one may succeed. Photograph by Betty Mackey.

  • Each nicely capped flower of Abutilon (flowering maple) dangles like a bell and sways with the wind. I am using this image as a Christmas card. /

  • Floral- Flower power,screen saver.

  • I love this photo. This photo was published in the Digital Photographer magazine! (Spring, 2009) It was also on display at Wassenburg Art Center in Van Wert, Ohio from October 5 – 31, 2008. This was taken in the early Spring. This is a pear blossom tree flower. Shutter Speed 1/800 / F6.3 / ISO 200 / Focal Length 200m / Nikon D80 Favorites 114 times! Copyright :: All Rights Reserved / Registered :: Fri Jan 16 03:00:54 UTC 2009 Title :: White and Pink Flowers

  • Bufffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens.

  • Magnolia (grandiflora?) in the late spring sunshine.

  • This is a small “slice” of my mother’s garden; she is a master gardener. Anything she plants thrives beautifully, and my father is just as good as she is. He saves watermelon and tomato seeds when he eats at restaurants, dries them, plants them, and harvests a good crop later on. What a wonder my parents are; truly their hearts are in the garden.

  • Photo taken at the Horticultural Teaching Gardens – SUNY Farmingdale, NY

  • Deep burgandy red day lilly blooming in my parent’s garden. It is back lit by the late afternoon sun highlighting the verigation in the petals and setting the little bits of pollen on the anthers aglow

  • Watercolor on rough watercolor paper / 15” x 22” in size

  • Nature in perfect harmony with its calling to Spring. I love these beautiful Cherry Blossums:-}Photo taken in Utah USA. !Photo by Canon IXUS

  • Blue Larkspur Flower My frist capture of this wonderful flower. Camera: Nikon D700 with 50mm f/1.4 Lense and 20mm Extension Tube. ISO 400 f/8.0. Larkspurs are about 5’ ft tall plants with tiny blue flowers. / Larkspur (Delphinium consolida) belongs to the buttercup family – Ranunculaceae. Larkspur flowers are almost as complex as the Orchids. The colorful Larkspur blooms cover a spectrum from white to blue to violet. Larkspur Flowers are irregularly shaped and bloom in a loose, vertical grouping along the upper end of the plant’s main stalk. Larkspur is actually a very complex flower consisting of both petals and sepals. Details from the Flower Expert.

  • Flower Beds, Lake and House: Kew Gardens, London, UK / Kew Gardens is celebrating its 250 years anniversary. Imagine a garden that’s matured over that period of time. Some of the tree specimens are simply stunning, I’ll return in Autumn to get the folliage colour, I’ve heard it’s stunning. Summer flowers are fantastic at the moment in the gardens, and the hot-houses are awesome. Camera Nikon D700 with 24-120mm Lense. More Images from Kew Gardens /

  • Hot Hot Lily Warmed up for fun:-) Nikon D700 with 24-120mm Lense.

  • My Grand Daughter…Pink/White Phalaenopsis Orchid provided by my wife Karo. / / !The generic name means “Phalaen[a]-like” and is probably a reference to the genus Phalaena, the name given by Carolus Linnaeus to a group of large moths; the flowers of some species supposedly resemble moths in flight. For this reason, the species are sometimes called Moth orchids. They are native throughout southeast Asia from the Himalayan mountains to the islands of Polillo Palawan and Zamboanga del Norte in the island of Mindanao in the Philippines and northern Australia. Orchid Island of Taiwan is named after this orchid. Little recent information about their habitat and their ecology in nature is available since little field research has been done in the last decades. / Phalaenopsis aphrodite (Moon Orchid) Most are epiphytic shade plants; a few are lithophytes. In the wild they are typically found below the canopies of moist and humid lowland forests, protected against direct sunlight, but equally in seasonally dry or cool environments. The species have adapted individually to these three habitats. Possessing neither pseudobulbs nor rhizome, Phalaenopsis shows a monopodial growth habit: an erect growing stem produces from the top one or two alternate, thick, fleshy, elliptical leaves a year while the older, basal leaves drop off at the same rate. The plant retains in this way four to five leaves. If very healthy, they can have up to ten or more leaves. The inflorescence, either a raceme or panicle, appears from the stem between the leaves. They bloom in their full glory for several weeks. If kept in the home, the flowers may last two to three months. Some Phalaenopsis species in Malaysia are known to use subtle weather cues to coordinate mass flowering.!

  • Pink rhododendron, a star of spring.

  • sketching the tulips near Wynyard, Tasmania Canon 5D Mark 2 with EF 24-105mm L IS lens at 105mm f/4 My personal website My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. All images and writing are copyright © Bob Wickham. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

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