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  1. Highgrove-Florilegium: Pflanzenmalereien für Kunst- und Gartenfreunde im Buchformat – Bezug im deutschsprachigen Raum nur über den Quaternio Verlag Luzern info@quaternio.ch +41 41 318 40 20 Facebook

  2. All royalties from The Highgrove Florilegium are donated to The Prince's Charities Foundation. An Entirely British Production - The binding of The Highgrove Florilegium volumes has been painstakingly undertaken by the best craftspeople in Britain, including Stephen Conway, James and Stuart Brockman and Victoria Hall.

  3. 26 apr 2008 · The first volume was published this week after six years work - in his 60th birthday year. The Highgrove Florilegium will comprise two volumes of 120 watercolours which record the plants in the gardens at Highgrove, which is the family home near Tetbury in Gloucestershire of the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall.

  4. Florilegium Watercolours. Leading botanical artists painted specimens of plants and trees growing in the Highgrove garden. The 124 selected paintings are now published in a limited edition with The Prince's Foundation. Each two-volume set is signed and handbound in leather and marbled paper with tooling in gold leaf.

  5. This page contains essential information to help you plan your visit to Highgrove. Please read everything carefully before booking, and again before travelling to the Gardens. Failure to do so might mean that you are unable to join your Garden Tour or Event. Highgrove is the private home of Their Majesties The King Charles III and The Queen ...

  6. the Highgrove Florilegium was published on 21 April 2008, botanical artists from all over the world were approached to paint the plants of the Highgrove Estate and submit them to a panel of experts for selection. The Prince and the former Highgrove head gardener, David Howard,

  7. 23 apr 2016 · Florilegia, or collections of botanical illustrations, date back hundreds of years to the first herbals in the 15 th century. Interest in florilegia has flourished anew in the 21 st century and it was suggested to the Prince of Wales that a florilegium of the plants at Highgrove would be both a celebration of his garden and an archival record of the plant collection.