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Plants Used in Dyeing. Safflower, Fustic, Brasilwood, Logwood. c1866

Plants Used in Dyeing. Safflower, Fustic, Brasilwood, Logwood. c1866

by Fitch, Walter Hood

Dye Plants antique print. Carthamus,Maclura, Casalpinia, Haematoxylon: Safflower Carthamus tinctorius, Fustic Maclura tinctoria, Brasilwood Caesalpinia crista, Logwood Haematoxylon campechianum.

Original hand-coloured steel engraving c1866 by James Bishop after Walter Hood Fitch for A History of the Vegetable Kingdom, embracing the physiology of plants, with their uses to man and the lower animals, and their application in the arts, manufactures and domestic economy. by William Rhind, lecturer on Botany, Marischal College, Aberdeen. Published in London by Blackie & Son of Glasgow, Edinburgh and London.

William Rhind (1797-1874) studied the herbal uses of botany during his medical course in Aberdeen, through his apprenticeship to an Elgin physician, during further studies in London, while he practised medicine and sold medicinal remedies in Elgin, and finally, in Edinburgh where there was better oppportunity to research and write about the uses of botany.

Walter Hood Fitch (1817-1892) was one of the most skilled botanical draughtsmen of his time. Fitch engraved and lithographed thousands of his own botanical prints over the years. His skill is particularly evident in this series of multi-layered seemingly three-dimensional groups of botanical subjects for Rhind's 'Practical Applications of Botany'.

245 x 150cm (9.5/8 x 5.7/8 inches). This interesting botanical study has slight age discolouration - over 150 years of age so not surprising with popular antique prints.

Stock Number: apRhind32Price: $65.00

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