"Pay attention to the world." -- Susan Sontag
 
Hellebore Hybrids (3 of 3)

Hellebore Hybrids (3 of 3)

From “Breeding Hellebores” in Hellebores: A Comprehensive Guide by C. Colston Burrell and Judith Knott Tyler:

“What makes perfection? Most [hellebore] breeders select stock for vigor, color, form, and the other more obvious facets. We all want perfection: a healthy, floriferous, disease resistant plant with bright, long-lasting flower color inside and out. Interesting sepal markings, colorful nectaries, a full boss of stamens, and styles in a contrasting color are all desirable traits. Add foliage with interesting structure and presence, and you approach perfection….

“We are particularly interested in selecting for the color on the reverse of the flower. The lovely insides of hellebore flowers are the reward we get for bending over to turn them up, but the backs of the flowers are what we see most often. We find that the color of the fading blossom is almost as important as the color of the freshest flower. Many parts of North America experience warm or even hot weather during the flowering season, which fades the flowers. If a plant has a pleasing tone as it ages, the period of interest is prolonged.

“Contrast also makes flowers distinctive. Stars, rings, blotches, or other center markings are as attractive on faded flowers as on fresh ones. Dark nectaries and even dark styles stand out against pale sepals. A white-flowering plant with red nectaries and styles is beautiful when freshly opened. When the nectaries fall after pollination and the colored carpels begin to swell with seeds, the darker tones of the carpels are very appealing. Some consider foliage the most important trait when choosing hellebores, since foliage is present in the garden year-round. Foliage of the hybrids can vary greatly in size and shape, offering another path on the numerous avenues available for the hellebore breeder to explore.”


Hello!

This is the third of three posts with photos of Hellebore hybrids (Helleborus x hybridus) from Oakland Cemetery, that I took in February 2026. The first post is Hellebore Hybrids (1 of 3), and the second post is Hellebore Hybrids (2 of 3).

In our previous two episodes (haha!), we observed the differences between Hellebores with relatively simple (but still delightful) colors, tints, and patterns, to some with more distinctive color variations and stripes. The photos I saved for this last post advance from there and include the most visually distinguished Hellebores I found, where genetic enhancements have produced impressive variations in colors, patterns, and textures. Some of the differences are subtle at first glance or in isolation, but become more visible when viewed close up, by comparing the plants to each other, and when using words to describe them instead of just relying on the visuals.

Before continuing, let’s talk about one of the Hellebore’s distinctive botanical assets. It’s common to refer to the colorful parts of the plants as flowers, and their component parts as petals, since this is how we observe their similarity to other flowering plants. But Hellebore flowers (as described on Wikipedia) actually consist of “five petal-like sepals surrounding a ring of small, cup-like nectaries” — so I’m going to refer to them as sepals rather than flower petals below. That “the sepals do not fall as petals would, but remain on the plant, sometimes for many months” accounts for what appears to be an extended blooming period for Hellebores; and, as I saw at Oakland just yesterday, most of the Hellebores I photographed in February are just as vibrant now as they were six to eight weeks ago.

Here we see a partially opened flower exhibiting the Hellebore’s typical nodding — or botanically speaking, cernuous (“with a face turned toward the earth”) — habit. Purple veins are present both on the insides and outsides of each sepal, with those on the inside displaying more saturated purple veins at greater density — evident in the sepal at the far left and in the purple reflection cast by the sepal at the far right. As the sepals spread open, then, the intensely colored veins — which follow the plant’s water distribution channels, or vascular architecture — will be highly visible to pollinators and function as a visual guide or runway leading to the plant’s nectar, right near the point where the vein color is most saturated.

Here, on a plant with more elaborate sepal shapes, we see similar veining. In this case, however, the veining is accompanied by scattered spots inside the sepals, especially adjacent to or just beyond the end of the vein tributaries. As with the previous plant, the veins serve the same purpose; the spots, however, were more likely produced by breeding efforts to exhibit an additional visual characteristic for an ornamental plant like a Hellebore.

In this third image, we see veining that looks like it was deconstructed into scattered spots. While our pollinator runway analogy may fall apart at this point, notice how the distribution of spots still vaguely resembles veining, but perhaps more importantly maintains a visual relationship where the colors are most saturated close to the nectar-producing parts of the plant. Whether a pollinator sees this differently than the previous plant, we probably don’t know — but the color saturation likely entices that pollinator to get to the same point. The thin veins with adjacent spots look a bit like a purple net cast over the sepals, and the style is sometimes referred to as netted — which fits.

In this final comparison, we see most of the veining has been engineered out of the sepals. Instead, the underside of each one has produced dozens of large, highly saturated purple spots in a pattern that is most dense toward the inside edges of the sepals. If these spots look to you as if they have texture — are not flat like the spots on the previous image — it’s not your imagination. The spots do feel like bumps to the touch, a characteristic called papilla, or a “small, fleshy projection on a plant.” That their texture came through in a photograph surprised me; but if you enlarge the image and look closely, you may see why. Each spot — an accumulated column of purple-colored cells — is darker at the top and lighter at the bottom, something we visually interpret as texture or depth even with a two-dimensional representation like a photograph. Or, as I like to think of it: piles of color eventually turn into texture.

Here I’ve placed the four plants we just reviewed next to each other as snapshots to highlight their visual differences — and as a way of seeing their color, contrast, texture, and form variations in a single glance.

Thanks for reading and taking a look!













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