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  2. Your Guide to Using Real Branches and Leaves as Fall Decor - AOL

    www.aol.com/guide-using-real-branches-leaves...

    With your preserved leaves in hand, consider displaying your fiery foliage as garland. ... Use pressed leaves and decoupage medium to adorn a pumpkin with seasonal and colorful embellishments. A ...

  3. 7 Easy Ways to Preserve Colorful Fall Leaves

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/7-easy-ways-preserve...

    If you want autumn to last forever, here's how to preserve fall leaves. These easy methods include pressing, microwaving, decoupage, and more.

  4. Oshibana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oshibana

    Oshibana (押し花) is the art of using pressed flowers and other botanical materials to create an entire picture from these natural elements. [1] Such pressed flower art consists of drying flower petals and leaves in a flower press to flatten them, exclude light and press out moisture. These elements are then used to "paint" an artistic ...

  5. Flower preservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flower_preservation

    Preserved rose blossoms and silk flowers. Flower preservation has existed since early history, although deliberate flower preservation is a more recent phenomenon.In the Middle East, the bones of pre-historic man were discovered with delicate wild flowers probably as a tribute to a passing loved one.

  6. Plant collecting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_collecting

    Plant specimens may be kept alive, but are more commonly dried and pressed to preserve the quality of the specimen. Plant collecting is an ancient practice with records of a Chinese botanist collecting roses over 5000 years ago. [1] Herbaria are collections of

  7. Herbarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbarium

    A herbarium (plural: herbaria) is a collection of preserved plant specimens and associated data used for scientific study. [ 2 ] The specimens may be whole plants or plant parts; these will usually be in dried form mounted on a sheet of paper (called exsiccatum , plur.

  8. Compressed tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressed_tea

    Tea brick, on display at Old Fort Erie Porters laden with "brick tea" in a 1908 photo by Ernest Henry "Chinese" Wilson, an explorer botanist. In ancient China, compressed teas were usually made with thoroughly dried and ground tea leaves that were pressed into various bricks or other shapes, although partially dried and whole leaves were also used.

  9. Tea processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_processing

    Orthodox tea leaves are heavily rolled either by hand or mechanically on a cylindrical rolling table or a rotor vane. The rolling table consists of a ridged table-top moving in an eccentric manner to a large hopper of tea leaves, of which the leaves are pressed down onto the table-top.