MSL
It seems like black botanicals are sort of hard to come by? I searched eBay and etsy and then I moved to Amazon. There I stumbled across this book about Mary Delaney.
It sounds like she was a fascinating society woman and artist in her day (the mid-late 1700's), who, between the ages of 72 and 82, made over 1,000 botanical works constructed almost entirely from cut paper. Can you imagine!?! I am endlessly inspired.
Lucky us, the British Museum allows downloading and printing of their images for personal use! Here are some of Mrs. Delaney's many works.
That Magnolia makes me happy! I love when I hear stories of women creating in their senior years!
ReplyDeletepve
These are all so gorgeous and I'm with PVE...my hat is off to creative seniors.
ReplyDeleteHow would you print those so they came out really good though? seems like it might not be very sharp on a normal printer.
ReplyDeleteHave you seen this post from Katy Elliot?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.katyelliott.com/blog/2009/09/inspired-by-dark-backgrounds-bright-colors.html
Good stuff!
Lovely. Really like the simple sprig with a few red berries.
ReplyDeleteI love...
ReplyDeleteyup, love these. here's a source on the posters: http://theevolutionstore.com/store/botanical-posters
ReplyDeleteYou have the most incredible blog. I have learned sooo much from you and your amazing finds. You always seem to have a leg up on the other decorators who just copy one another, or blindly follow Lilly Pulitzer, J. Crew, etc. and act like this is the be all and end all of life!
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work - you are such an inspiration.
Thanks for the BM link! I love these designs, especially the ones with lots of black space. It always surprises me how something almost 300 years old can look so fresh and modern. I'll definitely be printing and hanging a couple of these in my new place!
ReplyDeleteI think I'm in LOVE!
ReplyDeleteWow! These are amazing! I've never seen a black background botanical. I really think they are beautiful. Your ideas are amazing! Always looking forward to reading!
ReplyDeletePretty! I've never seen them on black-what a great twist =)
ReplyDeleteAnd now I do too!
ReplyDeleteThe tulip is so sweet! A black background is so glamorous!
ReplyDeleteThat magnolia flower made me jump a little. Beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteooo. I'm loving this too. What a fresh take on the old school botanical prints. :)
ReplyDeleteBre @ http://theredbungalow.blogspot.com
Love the botanicals! But what also caught my eye is that awesome iron/glass coffee table in the third picture. Any idea where that came from?
ReplyDeleteHow gorgeous! Another great resource!
ReplyDeleteThose a beautiful!! And AMAZING!!
ReplyDeleteI can't believe she did them all between the ages of 72 and 82-- what an incredible woman! I am sincerely inspired.
Thanks for sharing these. I, too, love botanicals, but the black background on these gives the images more depth. I have just the right place once I print and frame them.
ReplyDeleteLove it!!! But.... I love those green patterned pillows even more! Any idea where I can find that fabric? Thanks!
ReplyDeletei love these! i have 2 old barrel chairs from my grandmother that i recovered in a black fabric with large floral prints on them. it reminds me of British India, so elegant and romantic...
ReplyDeletedelightfully awesome.
ReplyDeletethe store J.E.M I blogged about had a bunch of old drawings of small sea life things and I thought of your blog. She said she found them from an old micro biologist. They were super cool.
ReplyDeleteI think someone asked this in a comment above, but how do you print these? I would like to have a larger one (bigger than my printer could do) - how big can you make them?
ReplyDeleteRegarding the questions on printing, you just need to take the images (either on a disk or a zip drive) to kinkos or a print shop and they will print out a large size for you. You can also upload the image to target, walmart or walgreen photo sites and they will print larger size prints. But I recommend actually taking the digital image into a shop and talking with the printers about size and specs.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I cropped a lot on the images on the British Museum site. So, you'll probably have to do the same to get the dimensions right and to get rid of all the non-art stuff in the images.
Thanks!
Awesome! I like to check out your blog every once in a while and was so excited when I saw this post on Mary Delaney! If you have a chance, you should check out the University of Texas's page on her: http://www.en.utexas.edu/Classes/Moore/delanyIndex.htm
ReplyDeleteThe Delaney botanicals are amazing. Could imagine the patience?! I also notices some floral on black botanicals on the nypl site you posted about awhile back.
ReplyDeleteYou are always so resourceful! I'm with you on black botanical prints...yum.
ReplyDeleteawesome! thanks for sharing. I recently found some similar images on black backgrounds at allposters.com
ReplyDeletehttp://bit.ly/cr35fP
Hi Jenny - found you site while looking at Mrs Delany images on google. I have bought the new book 'Mrs Delany and her Circle' - it is wonderful. I have just had a solo art exhibition in Berlin (I live in Ireland) mainly botanical on dark or black backgrounds - if you are interested ... visit
ReplyDeletewww.jenniecastleartist.blogspot.com
Thanks for the interesting blog.
Jen
FYI - don't buy the book like I did! There are only 5-6 full page pictures of the prints in the whole 250 page book. The rest are small thumbnails and LOTS of text about her and her life. I had planned on cutting out pages, but will definitely be going the printing route!
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