Over the weekend, I found a little time to do something with a bunch of flowers I've had pressed in my field notebooks. I've realized some interesting qualities about certain flowers after they're pressed. Lantanas tend to not press well - the vibrant color fades quickly, and not to a paler version of the original brilliance but to ugly browns :-( Pink evening primrose petals are even more delicate and thin after weeks of pressing, but the color stays good (as long as you pick the "youngest" flowers to press - the younger the pinker, the older the whiter). I tore several while trying to lay them down on a thin layer of glue but thankfully I collected MANY. Asteraceae holds up well after pressing and it's easy to glue down because the petals remain robust. I was surprised how well Indian paintbrush held up, given that it squelched and screeched when I pressed it (but it pressed beautifully!).
The top one includes 2 plants collected in the Sierras, some kind of Indian paintbrush and a Gray's Lupine. The rest are Texas wildflowers (collected last and this spring). The bottom one are all Texas wildflowers, collected this spring.
4 comments:
these are nice. have you pressed your sundews? i bet they are hard to press.
thanks! No, I didn't want to pick the sundews - plus I wasn't even sure if I was allowed to in the Big Thicket. Most of these flowers I picked off roadsides (incredibly, around my apartment there are patches here and there). I agree, the sundews would probably make a squelchy juicy mess!
Actually, that lupine and the indian paintbrush in the big picture you picked on the trip with Allie and Peter last summer to the Sierras. I stayed in the car because I wasn't feeling well, remember? They preserved amazingly!
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