Wellcome uses cookies.

Read our policy
Skip to main content
18 results filtered with: Primroses
  • Four female torsos joined at the waist with garden features as heads; symbolising the four seasons in a garden. Etching by T. B., c. 1797.
  • Four shrews swimming and hunting for food on a grassy bank. Coloured etching.
  • A leopard facing left surrounded by various named flowers and insects. Etching by W. Hollar, 1662, after himself.
  • Four flowering plants, including a cowslip (Primula veris), comfrey (Symphytum officinale) and a bulrush (Scirpus species). Colour nature print by A. Auer, c. 1853.
  • Eight flowering plants, possibly including species of Hosta, Primula, and a daylily. Watercolour, c. 1870.
  • Poison primula (Primula obconica): flowering plant. Chromolithograph, c. 1897, after H. Moon.
  • Twelve British wild flowers with their common names. Coloured engraving, c. 1861, after J. Sowerby.
  • Four flowers: a chrysanthemum, an auricula, a tulip and a morning glory. Coloured lithograph, c. 1850, after Guenébeaud.
  • Two flowering plants: primroses (Primula species) and saxifrages (Saxifraga species). Coloured lithographs by E. Champin, c. 1850, after herself.
  • Primroses (Primula species): leaves and flowers. Watercolour and pencil drawings.
  • Two examples of different root systems: a denticulate primrose rootstock and a creeping couch grass root. Coloured etching by F. Sansom, c. 1802, after S. Edwards.
  • An auricula plant (Primula auricula): flowering stem with a butterfly. Etching by N. Robert, c. 1660, after himself.
  • Four British garden plants, including a phlox: flowering stems and floral segments. Coloured etching, c. 1835.
  • Two plant cultivars: florist's cyclamens and mixed primulas. Chromolithograph, c. 1890.
  • Primrose (Primula vulgaris): flowering stems and leaves. Chromolithograph, c. 1877, after F. E. Hulme.
  • Eight plants, including two orchids, a primrose and a rhododendron: flowering stems. Coloured etching, c. 1837.
  • An Auricula plant: two flowering stems, one in outline only. Etching, c. 1787.
  • Two sprigs of flowers, including lilies, carnations and Auricula, meant as designs for embroidery. Etching with engraving after W. Kilburn, 1775.