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Salix buds

With my wet soils, I’ve been big on planting willows of various sorts. (No, I haven’t been good about writing down species and cultivars.) I like them in summer, though they’re not much to write home about then. Even if they were butt-ugly in summer, I’d still grow them just to watch their buds break.

willow buds breaking willow buds breaking

willow buds breaking willow buds breaking

Scanning flowers

Update: Great post by Julie over at Human Flower Project. I’ve been practicing this technique with my monthly bloom day posts and some other fiddling around:

May post (cold) | May post (hot) | Violets | April post

This morning over at Cold Climate Gardening, Kathy posted about Katinka Matson’s scanned flower art. I first became aware of this technique in a New York Times artcle (abstract only unless you have TimesSelect) by uber garden writer Ken Druse back in April 2005. He profiled artist Ellen Hoverkamp’s technique of arranging flowers on the platen of a flatbed scanner, with the resulting prints looking like old-timey pressed-flower arrangements, only with vibrant colors and 3-D effects.

my first scanBefore I even finished reading the article, I ran over to my office windowsill, snapped off whatever was flowering (violets, geraniums, fuschias), tossed them on the scanner, threw my jacket over the top, and hit scan. That’s the image there on the right. Larger image.

That doesn’t really do the technique justice. It’s just to prove that this is one of those techniques that takes a minute to learn — and a lifetime to master. In addition to Matson’s site (check out her gallery), Hoverkamp’s site offers gorgeous examples. And I stumbled across another floral scanner artist, Patri Feher.

I thank Kathy for reminding me about this technique. Maybe I’ll get into it again this year. When I do, here’s the how-to site that I’ll digest and put to good use. But in all honesty, the biggest barrier (beyond time) is that I really have a hard time cutting my best flowers off at the knees, even if they’ll be immortalized in art.

More early spring flowers

After 60s F yesterday, we’re headed back into a wintery mix for the next four or five days. (They’re calling for measurable snow Thursday night.) So these pictures from yesterday will probably be the last of the flower pix for awhile as everything goes into suspended animation.

Anyone know if that’s some kind of scilla coming up around the verbascum? I’m guessing that’s corydalis in bud on the right. Annie in the comments says the blue flowers look like Chionodoxa (Glory of the Snow). I think she’s right.

Chionodoxa

Crocus (note the pollinator) and primula

crocus primula

Have to go back to my bulb purchasing receipts to ID the one on the left (Annies says it’s Puschkinia, which I do recall ordering), and a hellebore

needs ID hellebore

Various hellebores

hellebore hellebore

hellebore hellebore

Snowdrops peaking and maybe an aquilegia emerging.

snowdrops snowdrops

And as a bonus, more of those primulas. (And many more primulas to come in the coming weeks.)

more primulas