

Botanical Alphabet Q Greeting Card
Q is for Quince. The quince fruit is a striking yellow colour colour and while some species can be eaten raw most require some form of cooking. It ...
View full detailsQ is for Quince. The quince fruit is a striking yellow colour colour and while some species can be eaten raw most require some form of cooking. It ...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsQ is for Quartz. Quartz is a hard crystalline mineral composed of silicon and oxygen atoms. There are many varieties of quartz, of which several ar...
View full detailsR is for Rose. In the Victorian times and the language of flowers called Floriagraphy, Roses had many different meanings: Red: I love you Yellow: F...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsR is for Ruby. Rubies range from bright pink to deep red and are one of the most striking gemstones because of it. The name ruby comes from the Lat...
View full detailsS is for Sage. Sage has had an epic list of miraculous attributes and and properties assigned to it over the history of humankind. From being able ...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsS is for Sapphire. Sapphire gemstones are most known for their mesmerising blue colour. They are not just pretty though, as they are also the 3rd h...
View full detailsT is for Tulip. Synonymous with Dutch tulip fields and windmills, tulip cultivation started in Persia in the 10th century. Tulip petals are edible ...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsT is for Topaz. Brazil is one of the largest producers of topaz, some clear topaz crystals can weigh hundreds of pounds. The Gemstone Alphabet comb...
View full detailsU is for Uva Ursi. Uva Ursi literally means grape of the bear, as the fruit is commonly eaten by...you guessed it - bears! Native Americans called ...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsU is for Unakite. Unakite is a semi-precious stone and an altered form of granite, giving it a characteristic pink and green appearance. The Gemsto...
View full detailsV is for Violet. Violets are of the plant genus Viola. Featured here is the one more exotic Parma Violet synonymous with the signature scent and fl...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsV is for Variscite. Variscite can be confused with turquoise in appearance although variscite is usually greener in colour. The green colour comes ...
View full detailsW is for Waterlily. All ancient cultures have associated water lilies with gods and spirituality - symbolising purity, joy, pleasure, rebirth, well...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsW is for Wood Iron. Wood Iron is used as a synonym for Goethite and Limonite...while usually quite dark and unspectacular to look at, rare finds ca...
View full detailsX is for Xerochrysum Bracteatum Commonly known as strawflower native to Australia. The name strawflower also stuck because it became most popular i...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsX is for Xanthite. Xanthite is a variety of Vesuvianite - a silicate mineral. It can appear brown, green, yellow, or blue. The Gemstone Alphabet co...
View full detailsY is for Yucca. The flower of the Yucca is the state flower of New Mexico. The plant is native to South America and symbolises transmutation, prote...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsY is for Yellow Copper. ellow Copper is actually a more colloquial name for minerals and alloys with high copper content....such as brass... The Ge...
View full detailsZ is for Zebra Plant. The characteristically stripey leaves give it its name but really its called Aphelandra squarrosa. That’s not a name for a fu...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full detailsZ is for Zircon. Zircon crystals occur in a of colours from red, brown, blue, colourless and green. The Gemstone Alphabet combines a minimalist aes...
View full details& (Ampersand) is for Amaryllis. The amaryllis plant has a symbiotic relationship with carpenter bees, and is also visited by moths at night.. I...
View full detailsMove over boring type(s), it’s time for The Jolly Type. 26 Google-eyed letters (and an ampersand), each of them unique in character. The perfect gr...
View full details& Ampersand for Amethyst These greeting cards following a theme of gemstones allow you to select a personalised card featuring the first letter...
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