This one is called Red With Red And Green On White.
You can buy this one by clicking here.
Native Americans grew and selected sunflower varieties for flour, food, and oil. The Spanish brought this new-world plant to Europe in the 1500s and by the 1700s and 1800s the Russians were growing them in large quantities. It eventually made its way back to North America in the form of Russian varieties that we still grow today, such as ‘Mammoth Russian’. Canadian and American farmers now grow sunflowers primarily for oil production, but plant hybridizers also started creating attractive varieties for the garden as well.
Today, there are many versions of the sunflower, some looking very different from the original tall, one-headed annual plant.
Breeders have shrunk varieties to be smaller, and bred them to have colorful, multiple heads per plant. The result is a garden flower that shines throughout the summer and fall. Some newer varieties to try include ‘Velvet Queen’ with its 6 foot-tall stalk and deep-mahogany colored flowers, ‘Autumn Beauty’ with its 5 foot-tall plants and a mix of yellow, orange and red flowers, ‘Moonshine’ with it unique pale-yellow flowers on a 6 foot-tall plant, ‘Yellow Spray’ that grows only 1 to 2 feet tall and ‘Sungold’ with its 3 foot-tall plant and fuzzy, yellow blooms. For cut-flower arrangements, try pollenless varieties such as ‘Sunrich’, to reduce the yellow pollen indoors.
This one is called Yellow With Pink Flowers
You can buy this one by clicking here.
Again great quality, description and expectations were more than I expected. Extra padding in your card holders are a plus.
Brendabte
I absolutely love it. The craftsmanship is stunning, very well made I am so pleased with it
Sandra L.
I was really excited about these card holders. I have never seen anything like them before. These are a great idea and I am very pleased with my purchase.
Angie
Because we are all familiar with the modern deck of playing cards, a standard deck of Bicycle rider back playing cards seems very “normal” and “traditional” to most of us. But to people of the past, a deck like this is anything but normal! The reality is that playing cards have undergone a radical transformation since their first beginnings several centuries ago. Our modern playing cards evolved into a deck of 52 cards with four suits in red and black and with two Jokers by making a journey that took hundreds of years and involved travelling through many countries. In fact, the most significant elements that shaped today’s deck were produced by the different cultures and countries that playing cards travelled through in order to get to the present day.
In this article, we will survey the history of playing cards, emphasizing in particular the geographic influences that have determined what modern playing cards look like today. Our whirlwind historical tour will begin in the East, under a cloud of uncertainty about the precise origin of playing cards. But from there we will make our way to Europe, first to Italy and Spain, then east to Germany, back west to France, and across the channel to England. Finally we will travel over the ocean to the United States, which is where most of our decks are produced today by USPCC in the form that we now know them.
Welcome To Nancy Got Busy
We are happy that you have stopped by
to see all that we have to offer.
We make all kinds of items from
upcycled materials.