Style1½ inches thick (3.75 cm) Product Details Artist grade canvas, archival inks, wooden stretcher bars, and UVB protective coating
AvailablityUsually ships within five business days. ArtistArt Sandi Platinum Member CollectionBotanical
Description Pasqueflower Seedhead - Anemone Occidentalis photographed in Mt. Rainier National ParkAnemone occidentalis, the white pasqueflower[1] or western pasqueflower, is a herbaceous species of flowering plant in the buttercup family Ranunculaceae. Other authorities place it in the genus Pulsatilla.[citation needed] Individuals are 1060 cm (3.923.6 in) tall, from caudices, with three to six leaves at the base of the plant that are 3-foliolate, each leaflet pinnatifid to dissected in shape. Leaf petioles are 610 cm (2.43.9 in) long. Leaves have villous hairs and their margins are pinnatifid or dissected. Plants flower briefly mid-spring to mid-summer, usually soon after the ground is exposed by melting snow. The flowers are composed of five to seven sepals (sometimes called tepals), normally white or soft purple, also mixed white and blueish purple, one flower per stem. The sepals are 1530 mm (0.591.18 in) long and 1017 mm (0.390.67 in) wide. Flowers have 150200 stamens. The fruit occurs in heads rounded to subcylindric in shape, with pedicels 1520 cm (5.97.9 in) long. The achenes are ellipsoid in shape, not winged, covered with villous hairs, with beaks curved that reflex as they age and 2040 mm (0.791.57 in) long, feather-like. Generally, the fruit persists into fall.Native to far western North America including British Columbia to California and Montana, it is found growing in gravelly soils on slopes and in moist meadows.[2]Wikipedia