A look at the amazing, slightly wicked world of carnivorous plants.
Imagine walking through a forest and seeing flowers and mushrooms glowing back at you in a beautiful rainbow gradient.
If beautiful fall leaves aren’t your thing, look away. For the rest of us, here are some inspiring images of Andy Goldsworthy’s fall nature art.
Lithops are a genus of succulents from southern Africa, evolved to look like polished stones or pebbles.
Made from landfill waste as well as a unique binder that permanently locks in carbon during the kiln process, this planter does more than make your plants look good.
Fractals exist everywhere in nature, creating infinite, mind-bending patterns that are even stranger than a casual glance may show.
These remarkably tiny and intricate baskets and bowls were hand woven from invasive grasses and weeds by Suzie Grieve and shows her very deft handiwork.
Bloomscape’s Tough Stuff collection includes houseplants that are exceptionally resilient, and basically, hard to kill.
Director Émilie Grange has a beautifully vibrant eye, and it’s on particular display in her work “Bucolic”, which pairs macro visions of flowers with colorful, flowing inks.
Whether you’ve attempted to grow an avocado pit or not, this nice time-lapse showcases the process of taking the plant from seed to sprout to potted plant.
LEGO’s new Botanical collection includes realistic flower bouquets and intricate bonsais trees that look great on a shelf.
The burger of the future could look like Akua’s new burger, made from carbon-neutral, zero-input ocean kelp.
In a brilliantly captured series, photographer Jan Vermeer shows us the diversity, beauty, and strangeness of the world of fungi that inhabit the damp corners of the world.