Search
Search
Antique botanical prints are detailed depictions of plants, flowers, and herbs that hold both scientific and artistic value. Artists carefully captured living specimens so that the botanical features were clearly visible. These drawings were often transformed into copper engravings, woodcuts, or lithographs, and frequently hand-colored, making each piece unique.
Historical botanical prints are not only beautiful works of art but also valuable documents for the study of plants and the history of botanical science. They provide insight into the flora of the past and demonstrate how artists and scientists collaborated to study and document nature.
Showing all 10 results
-
Engravings
Maria Sibylla Merian (1647 – 1717)
No. XXXIV “Lierre terestre fleuri” (1730)
-
Engravings
Pierre Alexandre Tardieu (1711 – 1771)
Irise de Perse, Semidouble and Giroflée Blanche No.3 (ca. 1612)
-
Engravings
Pierre Alexandre Tardieu (1711 – 1771)
Irise de Perse, Semidouble and Giroflée Blanche No.3 (ca. 1612)
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 40 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 39 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 38 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 37 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 36 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 35 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).
-
Engravings
Emanuel Sweerts (1552-1612)
Iris. Plate 34 from the book Florilegium Amplissimum et Selectissimum (1647).