Nobilis greeting card

8.00 $

About Myrtle

Myrtus, with the common name myrtle, is a genus of flowering plants in the family Myrtaceae, described by Swedish botanist Linnaeus in 1753.The plant may grow more than 5 m (about 16.5 feet) high. The opposite leaves are thick and lustrous, with many small, translucent, oil-bearing glands. The solitary white flowers, about 1.8 cm (about 0.7 inch) long, are borne on short stalks. The fruit is a purplish black, many-seeded berry.

About bay leaves

Bay laurel (Laurus nobilis, Lauraceae). Fresh or dried bay leaves are used in cooking for their distinctive flavour and fragrance. The leaves should be removed from the cooked food before eating. The leaves are often used to flavour soups, stews, braises and pâtés in many countries. The fresh leaves are very mild and do not develop their full flavour until several weeks after picking and drying.

 

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Description

A collection closed to nature, crafted on beige cardboard, with striations of good quality, using only bay laurel or myrtle leaves. Nobilis’ collection appeals to the universal truth of our feelings, expressing the purity of love, the persistence of feelings, honor, and the connection between people and their homes. Plants of the elites, laurel and myrtles, were intensely used in ancient times and bring us the flavor of nature.  Because of its elegance of habit, appealing odor, and amenity to clipping by the topiarius, as much as for sacred associations, the myrtle was an indispensable feature of Roman gardens. As a reminder of home, it will have been introduced wherever Roman elites were settled, even in areas of the Mediterranean Basin where it was not already endemic: “the Romans… must surely have attempted to establish a shrub so closely associated with their mythology and tradition”.

In Greek mythology and ritual the myrtle was sacred to the goddesses Aphrodite and also Demeter: Artemidorus asserts that in interpreting dreams “a myrtle garland signifies the same as an olive garland, except that it is especially auspicious for farmers because of Demeter and for women because of Aphrodite. For the plant is sacred to both goddesses.

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