Mother Earth Gardener

HISTORY in Bloom

CRAFTED MORE THAN A CENTURY AGO, Harvard’s Glass Flowers still elicit gasps of disbelief from viewers. There’s a stem of scarlet bee balm (Monarda didyma) so realistic it looks like it might actually smell of citrus and oregano if rubbed hard enough; a branch of mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) that a florist could convincingly place side-by-side with fresh blooms; and a tiger orchid (Rossioglossum grande), pollinated by glass bees whose wings seem to whir.

Artists Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka’s approximately 4,300 other botanical models also stun. From 1887 until Leopold’s death in 1895, the father and son glassworkers devoted their lives to reverse engineering the world’s flora and reconstructing them in glass at their studio and garden near Dresden, Germany.

After Leopold’s death, Rudolf continued to make glass models for Harvard until 1936. The Blaschka methods, inherited through several generations of glassworkers, allowed

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Mother Earth Gardener

Mother Earth Gardener5 min read
SWEET (and Simple) Potatoes
MORE TIMES THAN I’D LIKE to admit, a sweet potato has remained hidden in my vegetable cupboard long enough to begin sprouting. For years, I’d either cook it before it spoiled or I’d toss it into the compost pile. After I’d started a flock of chickens
Mother Earth Gardener1 min read
Location And Creativity
When we moved from Pennsylvania to Raleigh, North Carolina, 26 years ago, one of the first jobs on my to-do list was to remove a 30-by-50-foot patch of sod on the side of the house for our new garden plot. The sun shone well on the spot we chose, and
Mother Earth Gardener2 min read
Recommended Garden Products for Summer
~ King Stropharia, also known as “Garden Giant,” is one of the easiest mushrooms for beginners to grow. Experienced growers have also been known to use it as a learning tool for cultivating fungi on hardwood chip beds or mulch in the garden. Gardener

Related