Name: Common Foxglove
Scientific: Digitalis purpurea
A.K.A.: Foxglove, Digitalis, Purple Foxglove, Witches' Thimbles
Notes: A biennial plant that grows as a rosette of leaves in the first year, before flowering and then dying in the second year. The common name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon 'foxes glofa' meaning foxes gloves, and refers to the tubular flowers, which are suggestive of the gloves of a small animal. The flowers were also known as witches' thimbles by Medieval herbalists. Although toxic, the foxglove has been widely used in folk medicine as a cure for sore throats, as compresses for bruising and ulcers, and as a diuretic; it was, however, often fatal. The active agents in foxglove, known as digitoxin and digoxin are still used in modern medicine to control heart rate. This plant is common in western and south western Europe. Very widespread throughout Britain. It has been spread to many other temperate places, including the Americas and Australia. This plant thrives in acidic soils in a range of habitats including open woods, woodland clearings, moorland, heath margins, hedge banks, sea-cliffs, waste land, rocky mountain slopes and hedgebanks. It is common in disturbed sites, or on burnt ground. Despite its toxicity, it is often grown in gardens.
There are 16 models in this set:
5 Standard. Fully mature and in good health. Useable in most scenes.
5 Health. Thriving, distressed, unhealthy, dying, dead.
5 Maturity. Fruiting, Blooming, budding, growing, seedling.
1 Patch.
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EVERYPlant has a mission ... which is to model every plant species in the world (plus some extinct, fantasy and sci-fi variations as well)! Okay, maybe not EVERY plant! If you don't see it in our store, please get in contact; we have thousands of species on file awaiting upload.
Software: Daz Studio 4