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Stunning Vintage Botanical Prints from Oken’s Natural History

Explore these beautiful free downloads of vintage botanical prints, including mushrooms and plants, from the 19th-century classic Abbildungen zu Okens Allgemeiner Naturgeschichte.

If you’re a fan of vintage botanicals, then you’re in for a treat! Today, I’m sharing a collection of stunning, public-domain prints from the 1846 edition of Abbildungen zu Okens Allgemeiner Naturgeschichte. This impressive work by Lorenz Oken is packed with incredibly detailed illustrations of plants, fungi and flowers. Whether you’re looking to add a vintage touch to your home decor or wall art, get creative with craft projects, or love the beauty of nature, these prints are perfect.

Oken’s Natural History Collection

Lorenz Oken, a German naturalist and philosopher, was all about capturing the beauty and complexity of the natural world. He organized life into a hierarchy, starting with minerals and moving through plants, animals, and humans. His goal? To make natural history accessible to everyone. The botanical illustrations from Abbildungen zu Okens Allgemeiner Naturgeschichte (1846) offer a unique look at his scientific vision and bring the 19th-century fascination with nature into our modern world.

Charts of Fungi, Seaweed, Flowers, and Plants

In this post, you’ll find a curated selection of prints featuring fungi, seaweed, flowering plants, and various vegetables. Each one is a beautiful representation of 19th-century botanical art, showing the plants in a way that’s both educational and decorative. These prints are great for anyone interested in vintage art, gardening, or adding a touch of historical charm to their surroundings.

As shown in his detailed illustrations, Oken believed all of nature was interconnected. The plants, fungi, and flowers in his collection aren’t just random—they’re carefully chosen and beautifully illustrated to showcase the diversity of life. His 1846 publication made science something everyone could explore and enjoy, with a style that’s easy to appreciate even today.

These vintage botanical prints from Oken’s collection have a classic, elegant feel, much like the popular Adolphe Millot’s botanical illustrations. While Millot’s prints are colourful and show a variety of plants together, Oken’s 1846 illustrations focus on the fine details of each plant individually.

How To Download Oken’s Botanical Artwork

Each print is free to download, making it super easy to add beautiful artwork to your space. Here are a few ideas:

  • Wall Art: Print them out, frame them, and create a vintage-inspired gallery wall.
  • Craft Projects: Perfect for decoupage, scrapbooking, or journaling.
  • Gift Wrapping: Print onto paper for unique, botanical-style gift wrap.

Ready to get started? Just scroll down to find Oken’s beautiful botanical illustrations in the gallery. Click on the title above the print you want to download, and a higher-resolution print will open in a new tab. You can then print or save this image.

The Vintage Fungi Prints

These beautiful fungi illustrations from Oken’s 1846 book capture mushrooms’ unique shapes and details in a classic vintage style. Each print shows the intricate features of different fungi types. At that time, mushrooms were often grouped within the plant kingdom, as scientific understanding of fungi was still developing. Since then, classification has evolved, and fungi are now recognized as a distinct kingdom, entirely separate from plants, due to their unique biology and ecological role.

If you’re a fungi fan, check out the other collections on the site, like mushroom charts, James Sowerby fungi drawings, and even an easy mushroom drawing guide.

Print 1: Mushrooms 1

The first of 4 prints in Oken’s book.

A vintage chart of various fungi and mushrooms

Print 2: Mushrooms 2

a chart of vintage botanical prints of mushrooms and fungi

Poster 3: Edible Mushrooms

Truffles are edible fungus, but they’re quite different from common mushrooms. Unlike mushrooms, which typically grow above ground, truffles grow underground near the roots of certain trees, like oaks and hazelnuts.

Oken's chart of edible mushrooms

Print 4: Harmful Mushrooms

The most harmful mushroom in the world is widely considered to be Amanita phalloides, commonly known as the death cap mushroom. Due to its potent toxins, primarily amatoxins, it’s responsible for the majority of mushroom poisoning deaths worldwide. These toxins can cause severe liver and kidney damage even in small amounts, leading to death if not treated promptly.

The death cap is especially dangerous because it resembles several edible mushrooms, which can easily mislead foragers. Symptoms often don’t appear until 6 to 12 hours after ingestion, when significant organ damage may have already occurred, making early treatment challenging.

Okens vintage botanical print of harmful mushrooms

Mosses, Ferns, Grasses, Flowers & Lilies

A collection of vintage botanical prints of plants Oken classified as being veined (vascular).

Print 5: Aderpflanzen and Mosses

Aderpflanzen: These are “vascular plants,” meaning plants with veins or vessels to carry water and nutrients. This group includes ferns, flowers, and trees, allowing them to grow more complex.

In Oken’s system, these two groups represent a progression in plant complexity, with mosses being simpler and vascular plants (Aderpflanzen) more complex. This classification reflects his view on the hierarchy of life, from simple to more complex organisms.

Vascular plants and mosses by oken

Print 6: Liverworts & Ferns

In Oken’s book:

  1. Droffel Pflanzen: This term means liverworts or simple plants that grow in damp places. They’re small, non-vascular plants that reproduce with spores like moss.
  2. Farren: This refers to ferns. Ferns are more complex plants with true leaves and veins. They also reproduce with spores but have larger, feathery fronds.

Oken saw liverworts as simpler than ferns, which have more structure.

The site has a whole post on vintage fern prints and a tutorial on how to draw ferns for the more artistically inclined.

Okens botanical chart of ferns and liverworts

Print 7: Woody Plants and Grasses

In Oken’s book with this vintage botanical print:

  1. Rinden Pflanzen: This means “woody plants,” like trees and shrubs with bark-covered stems and can grow tall and strong.
  2. Gräser: This means “grasses.” Grasses are simpler plants with hollow stems and narrow leaves found in fields and meadows.

Oken considered woody plants more complex than grasses because of their strong, bark-covered structures.

woody plants and grasses classification chart OKen

Print 8: Flowering Plants & Lillies

Blast Pflanzen: These “flowering plants” produce blossoms and seeds. They’re considered more advanced because of their colourful flowers and reproductive complexity.

Lillien: This refers to “lilies,” a flowering plant with big, beautiful blooms. Lilies are a prime example of these complex, seed-producing plants.

If you like these, check out Jane Loudons beautiful bulbous flowers and this collection of Lily flower illustrations.

Flowering plans and lilies chart

Palms, Root, Stem & Leafy Plants

Print 9: Palms

Check out this collection of botanical palm illustrations on the site.

Okens chart of various types of palm trees

Print 10: Root Plants

Oken used “Wurzel Pflanzen” to emphasize plants where the root plays a key role, structurally or as a primary feature.

Okens chart of root plants

Print 11: Stem Plants

In Oken’s classification, Stengel Pflanzen translates to “stem plants.” This term refers to plants where the stem is the main structural feature, supporting leaves, flowers, or branches. Examples include:

  • Herbaceous Plants: Plants with soft, green stems, such as grasses, herbs, and flowers.
  • Vines and Climbing Plants: Plants that rely on flexible stems to climb or spread, like ivy or grapevines.
Lorenz Okens chart of vintage botanical illustrations of stem plants

Print 12: Leafy Plants

In Oken’s classification, Laub Pflanzen means “leaf plants.” This term focuses on plants where leaves are the prominent feature, often large and plentiful, playing a vital role in photosynthesis. Examples include:

  • Deciduous Trees and Shrubs: Trees that lose their leaves seasonally, like oaks and maples, where leaves are essential for food production.
  • Leafy Herbs and Plants: Plants with large, abundant leaves, like lettuce, spinach, and basil.

If you want some leafy plants, check out this beautiful tropical houseplant drawing collection on PictureBoxBlue.

vintage botanical print of a collection of Oken classified leafy plants

Seed, Nuts, Berry & Fruit Plants

Print 13: Seed Plants

In Oken’s classification, Samen Pflanzen refers to “seed plants,” or plants that reproduce by producing seeds. This group includes:

  • Flowering Plants (Angiosperms): Plants that create seeds within flowers or fruits, such as sunflowers, apple trees, and roses.
  • Conifers (Gymnosperms): Plants that bear seeds in cones, like pine and fir trees.

If you want more botanical charts of fruits and vegetables, check out those by Adolphe Millot.

chart of vintage botanical illustrations of seed plants according to Oken

Print 14: Gröps pflanzen

botanical plant chart by Lorenz Oken

Print 15: Plant Flowers

botanical chart of plant flowers Lorenz Oken

Poster 16: Nut Plants

This category includes plants that produce nuts, which are hard-shelled seeds or fruits. Examples are:

  • Trees and Shrubs with Edible Nuts: Walnut, hazelnut, chestnut, and almond trees, where the nut serves as the main reproductive seed.
  • Other Nut-Producing Plants: Including pecans and pistachios, valued for their nutritious seeds.

Oken grouped these plants by their nut-producing feature, focusing on those with hard, protective shells around the seeds, which help reproduction and dispersal.

vintage botanical chart of nut plants by Lorenz Oken

Print 17: Pflaumen Pflanzen

This translates as plum plants, so I assume the classification is one of the stoned fruits.

vintage botanical chart of stoned fruits Lorenz Oken

Print 18: Berry Plants

berry plants vintage chart Lorenz Oken

Print 19: Apfel Pflanzen

vintage botanical chart of fruit plants

Add a Touch of Vintage Nature to Your Space!

These vintage prints from Oken’s 1846 collection are a fantastic way to bring a bit of botanical history into your home! Whether framing them as wall art, using them for DIY crafts, or adding a pop of nature to your decor, these illustrations are perfect for creating that timeless look.

If you love these, don’t miss our Renaissance flower, free cactus prints, and the ever-popular watercolour fruit prints.

Or, take a peek at the Art Nouveau flowers for even more beautiful, nature-inspired art.

a collage of some of Okens botanical plant prints

If you fancy, you can Buy Me A Coffee Here.

sandra

Monday 28th of October 2024

Gorgeous collection of pages, I'm bookmarking the page...thanks so much

claire

Tuesday 29th of October 2024

Thank you, I will be featuring more of his work later.