Empres of India, developed by Barr 1921, it was improved for increased bud count and extended bloom period by Amos Perry, and Registered...Read More again with AIS by Perry as 'Pallida Empress of India' in 1938. 42" Early Midseason Bloomtime.This Iris is a Large flowered, darker, smoother and satiny form of I. pallida from England that is pretty rare in the United States. It is a bit shorter than the other pallidas: Dalmatica, Princess Beatrice, and Caterina, and the French pallida Floridor, but higher quality bloom ; although some would say Princess Beatrice of almost equal quality flower but better height and bud count, is the true royalty of pallidas.
The only other two Empress of India named flowers still around are Empress of India Nasturtium which is an annual plant usually grown from seed that has dark blue green leaves and little red round flowers; and Empress of India Crinum Lily from the Caribbean that is nocturnal and almost impossible to find. The Empress of India Lily that was mentioned in the Secret Garden, was a form of tiger lily that is now thought to be extinct and their was a Empress of India Asiatic Lily developed 45 years ago that was thought to be the finest asiatic lily ever created that has also been lost and thought to no longer be in existence.
Empres of India, developed by Barr 1921, it was improved for increased bud count and extended bloom period by Amos Perry, and Registered...Read More