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Botanical Prints #1 | Botanical Prints #2 | Botanical Prints #3 | Botanical Prints #4 | Botanical Prints #5 | Butterfly Prints #1

The Thistle

Order Item FWF-P67

$20.00

Antique botanical print from series titled "Familiar Wild Flowers" published by Cassell and Company, Ltd between 1878-1884. Illustrated and described by Frederick Edward Hulme who was born March 1841 in Hanley, Staffordshire, England and moved to London in 1844. He began studying art at South Kensington in 1858. In 1870 he was hired as art and drawing master at Marlborough College. In 1886 he was made professor of geometrical drawing at King's College. In 1896 he was made professor of geometrical and freehand drawing, again at King's College. He published and illustrated several works before passing away April 1909 in Kew, England.

This particular print is of a flowering plant, Cnicus acaulis. The Dwarf Thistle rarely attains more than an inch in height. The root-stock is woody and perennial, and from it springs a spreading rosette of very prickly leaves. From their center springs a crimson flower-head considered large even when compared with many other species of thistle. The roots were boiled in wine by our ancestors as correctives of impurities and poverty of the blood.

Original print measures 5" wide X 7 1/2" tall and is in excellent condition for the age. This is not a reproduction. Four descriptive text pages containing two charming black and white drawings are included with the purchase of this fine print.

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