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Coreopsis tinctoria Nutt.
Yellow and brown bi-colour flowers of a golden tickseed plant (coreopsis tinctoria). Coreopsis tinctoria (commonly known as plains coreopsis, garden tickseed, golden tickseed, or calliopsis) is cultivated as an ornamental plant for gardens, and as a native plant for wildlife gardens and natural landscaping. Although somewhat drought-tolerant, naturally growing plants are usually found in areas with regular rainfall.
Coreopsis tinctoria
Genista tinctoria in the garden
Some Cota tinctoria, the golden marguerite flowers
Genista tinctoria, the dyer's greenweed
Cota tinctoria (golden marguerite) is a species of perennial flowering plant in the sunflower family. The image was captured during springtime.
Cota tinctoria, Anthemis tinctoria. Bright yellow flowers that look like daisies against Grass with a blurred background. Beautiful close-up. SOFT OPTICAL EFFECT (lens)
Cota tinctoria, the yellow or dyers chamomile blooming in wildflower meadow
Prostrate to erect, deciduous, spineless sub shrub to 1,5m, often less, very variable. Leaves oval to linear-lanceolate, hairy or not. Flowers8-15mm, in leafy, stalked spikes; standard equalling keel. Pod narrow-oblong, hairless, brown when ripe.\nHabitat: Grassy places, meadows, road-verges and banks, heaths and open woods.\nFlowering Season: June-August.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the extreme north.\n\nLong used as a dye plant - yielding both yellow and green dyes. It is also used as alternative medicine. The seeds are purgative.\n\nThis Picture is made in the Eifel (Germany) in June 2022.
Macro photo of a dyer woodruff flower, Asperula tinctoria.
Macro photo of a dyer woodruff flower, Asperula tinctoria.
Plains coreopsis in a backyard wildflower garden.
Medium to tall, mostly hairless, greyish biennial. stem leaves arrow-shaped, clasping the stem. Flowers yellow, 3-4mm in much branched racemes, Fruit an oblong, flattened pendent silicula, 11-27mm, dark brown when ripe.\nHabitat:: Dry places, cultivated land, waste places, cliffs and rocks, to 2000m.\nFlowering Season: July-August.\nDistribution: Eastern Europe, West Asia. Throughout, except Ireland, the Faeroes, Iceland and Spitsbergen, naturalized probably in most places and persisting as a relict of former cultivation.\n\nUsed by the Greeks and Romans as a medical plant. During the Middle Ages it was widely cultivated for the production of a blue dye, Indigotin, produced by crushing and fermenting the leaves. Still cultivated in gardens today.\n\nThis Picture is made along the River Waal near Nijmegen (the Netherlands).
Medium to tall, mostly hairless, greyish biennial. stem leaves arrow-shaped, clasping the stem. Flowers yellow, 3-4mm in much branched racemes, Fruit an oblong, flattened pendent silicula, 11-27mm, dark brown when ripe.\nHabitat:: Dry places, cultivated land, waste places, cliffs and rocks, to 2000m.\nFlowering Season: July-August.\nDistribution: Eastern Europe, West Asia. Throughout, except Ireland, the Faeroes, Iceland and Spitsbergen, naturalized probably in most places and persisting as a relict of former cultivation.\n\nUsed by the Greeks and Romans as a medical plant. During the Middle Ages it was widely cultivated for the production of a blue dye, Indigotin, produced by crushing and fermenting the leaves. Still cultivated in gardens today.\n\nThis Picture is made along the River Waal near Nijmegen (the Netherlands).
Faerberhound chamomile, Anthemis tinctoria, is an important medicinal plant with yellow flowers and is widely used in medicine. It is a perennial and one of the Faerber plants.
Medium to tall, mostly hairless, greyish biennial. stem leaves arrow-shaped, clasping the stem. Flowers yellow, 3-4mm in much branched racemes, Fruit an oblong, flattened pendent silicula, 11-27mm, dark brown when ripe.\nHabitat:: Dry places, cultivated land, waste places, cliffs and rocks, to 2000m.\nFlowering Season: July-August.\nDistribution: Eastern Europe, West Asia. Throughout, except Ireland, the Faeroes, Iceland and Spitsbergen, naturalized probably in most places and persisting as a relict of former cultivation.\n\nUsed by the Greeks and Romans as a medical plant. During the Middle Ages it was widely cultivated for the production of a blue dye, Indigotin, produced by crushing and fermenting the leaves. Still cultivated in gardens today.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the Eifel (Germany) in June 2019.
Close-up of Dry Organic Alkanet or Ratan Jot (Alkanna tinctoria) roots, in a jute bag and on a scoop, Isolated on a white background.
mother and child in Normandy
Morinda Tinctoria , wild Indian mulberry tree fruits....
Indigofera tinctoria bears the common name True indigo. The plant was one of the original sources of indigo dye. It has been naturalized to tropical and temperate Asia, as well as parts of Africa, but its native habitat is unknown since it has been in cultivation worldwide for many centuries. Today most dye is synthetic, but natural dye from I. tinctoria is still available, marketed as natural coloring. The plant is also widely grown as a soil-improving groundcover. Some kinds of Indigo are called opium. Such Indigo was grown in British India.
horses don't always obey orders!
Indigofera tinctoria branches with leaves and pink flowers with blurred foreground. True indigo plant from the bean family the source of indigo dye.
Close-up image of a Fairy-ring Longhorn Beetle (Pseudovadonia livida) on Anthemis tinctoria
Cota tinctoria, the golden marguerite
Medium to tall, mostly hairless, greyish biennial. stem leaves arrow-shaped, clasping the stem. Flowers yellow, 3-4mm in much branched racemes, Fruit an oblong, flattened pendent silicula, 11-27mm, dark brown when ripe.
Close-up of Dry Organic Alkanet or Ratan Jot (Alkanna tinctoria) roots, in white ceramic mortar and pestle, isolated on a white background.
Cota tinctoria, the golden marguerite
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