Showing posts with label pansy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pansy. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2014

Pansy Time

This is pansy season in New England.    I am very fond of them.  It seems they are one of the most beloved flowers, advertised by everyone for as long as you can find catalogs if you count the original Viola tricolor!  

Here is a small sample of pansy items.  An active day at school has left me ready for bed!


The following is from Wikipedia, it gives a lot of starter points to sift through!
In the early years of the 19th century, Lady Mary Elizabeth Bennet (1785–1861), daughter of the Lord of Tankerville, collected and cultivated every sort of Viola tricolor (commonly, heartsease) she could procure in her father's garden at Walton-upon-Thames, Surrey. Under the supervision of her gardener, William Richardson, a large variety of plants was produced via cross-breeding. In 1812, she introduced her pansies to the horticultural world, and, in 1813, Mr. Lee, a well-known florist and nurseryman, further cultivated the flower. Other nurserymen followed Lee's example, and the pansy became a favorite among the public.
About the same time that Lady Bennett was busy cultivating heartsease, James, Lord Gambier was doing the same in his garden at Iver under the advice and guidance of his gardener Thomson. A yellow viola, Viola lutea, and a wide-petalled pale yellow species of Russian origin, Viola altaica were among the crosses that laid the foundation for the new hybrids classed asViola × wittrockiana, named for the Swedish botanist Veit Brecher Wittrock (1839-1914). A round flower of overlapping petals was the aim of early trials; in the late 1830s a chance sport that no longer had narrow nectar guides of dark color on the petals but a broad dark blotch on the petals (which came to be called the "face"), was found. It was developed in Gambier's garden and released to the public in 1839 with the name "Medora".
By 1833, there were 400 named pansies available to gardeners who once considered its progenitor, heartsease, a weed. Specific guidelines were formulated for show pansies but amateur gardeners preferred the less demanding fancy pansies. About this time, James Grieve developed the viola and Dr. Charles Stuart developed the violetta, both smaller, more compact plants than the pansy.
Below...a trade card.













Saturday, March 15, 2014

Trade Cards: Hearts Are Glad When Thou Dost Grow

These McCullough's trade cards are from 1888.  They are special because they are designed for the seed merchant to feature his flowers.  I more commonly find a sappy and  generic trade card from this period that seedsmen have used, or a very business like card with text only.  

I checked...the quote above isn't a quote.






Below is a sample of an off-the-shelf design that might be used by many sorts of businesses.



This Rice's card is really nice and snappy, not sappy, but I bet it was a generic blank
 to which the printer just added Rice's name.