Printed plant specimens
Even after Kniphof’s innovations, botanists and plant collectors continued to use the simplest form of nature printing as a useful means of collecting information about plants.
Using a plant specimen as a stamp, this method did not require a skilled botanical artist or expensive equipment. It was a quick and economical means of capturing an image of the plant for study. Nature prints even had some advantages over herbarium collections in which the preserved plant specimens could be delicate and susceptible to insect damage.
In the late 18th and 19th centuries, an increasing number of respected botanists used nature printing as legitimate contribution to their plant collecting activities. These included the grandfather of Charles Darwin, Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802), who kept a nature printed diary and Alexander von Humbolt (1769–1859), who created a set of nature prints during his travels in the Americas, as insurance against the loss of the dried plant specimens he had collected.
Image (left): Botanical sketches thought to be by Colonel Richard Beddome. Image (centre): Nature prints of local flora commisioned by Beddome in India in the 1860s. Credit: RHS Lindley Collections. Image (right): Herbarium specimen of Bauhinia variegata, (the same plant shown in Beddome's nature print), collected in 1930. Credit: RHS.