SKU: 83608417359
anthurium titanium

anthurium titanium Anthurium magnificum

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Description

anthurium titanium Anthurium magnificumAnthurium magnificum Anthurium magnificum is a large velvet leaved Anthurium species with broad, heart shaped leaves, strong pale veins and a substantial petiole base. The foliage opens soft and fresh, then hardens into a deeper green surface with a firmer, heavier blade as the leaf matures. This crown forming aroid has a weighty look in a pot. The leaves are held outward on thick petioles, giving mature plants a wide, layered shape. Root health,

Anthurium magnificum

Anthurium magnificum is a large velvet-leaved Anthurium species with broad, heart-shaped leaves, strong pale veins and a substantial petiole base. The foliage opens soft and fresh, then hardens into a deeper green surface with a firmer, heavier blade as the leaf matures.

This crown-forming aroid has a weighty look in a pot. The leaves are held outward on thick petioles, giving mature plants a wide, layered shape. Root health, warmth and even moisture are visible in the next emerging leaf, especially on larger blades with broad velvet surfaces.

Anthurium magnificum at a glance

  • Growth habit: Upright epiphytic subshrub with a strong central crown and heavy petioles.
  • Leaf shape: Broad cordate blades with a deep sinus and rounded upper shoulders.
  • Leaf texture: Velvet surface with a firm, substantial feel as leaves harden.
  • Venation: Pale veins stand clearly against the green blade and become more defined with maturity.
  • Key feature: Four-angled petioles are a characteristic identification feature of this species.

Morphology, origin and indoor growth

Anthurium magnificum is an accepted Anthurium species in the Araceae family. It is native to Colombia, including Risaralda, Cundinamarca and Boyacá, where it grows in wet tropical conditions as an epiphytic subshrub. Its natural growth context points to warm roots, constant atmospheric moisture, filtered forest light and a coarse root environment.

The inflorescences follow the usual Anthurium spathe-and-spadix form, while the leaves carry the recognisable mature shape: broad, velvety, heavily veined and lifted on thick petioles. In indoor cultivation, Anthurium magnificum develops most evenly when the roots stay active in a fresh, open substrate.

Care for Anthurium magnificum

  • Light: Provide bright filtered light. Strong indirect light allows larger leaves to develop and clear venation; protect the leaf surface from direct midday sun.
  • Watering: Water thoroughly once the upper part of the mix has started to dry. The root ball should stay lightly moist, with enough air moving through the mix.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid substrate with bark, coarse coconut husk, perlite, pumice and a moderate moisture-retentive fraction.
  • Humidity: Keep humidity around 60–80% where possible. Expanding leaves size up more cleanly when humidity and airflow stay balanced.
  • Temperature: Maintain 20–28 °C for active growth. Cooler rooms slow root function and make wet substrate riskier.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly but consistently during active growth. Large leaves draw steadily on nutrients, especially calcium, magnesium and nitrogen.
  • Potting: Choose a stable pot with excellent drainage. A top-heavy crown may need a heavier cover pot or careful placement.
  • Repotting: Refresh the substrate before it collapses into fine particles. Keep the crown at the same level and avoid burying the petiole bases.
  • Leaf care: Dust leaves with a soft, slightly damp cloth. Velvet leaves mark easily, so avoid oils and harsh wiping.
  • Propagation: Divide only mature plants with separate growth points and healthy roots. Small divisions recover slowly if root mass is limited.

Growth issues to check early

  • New leaves staying small: Check light level, root space and feeding. Large foliage needs active roots and steady nutrition while the leaf is forming.
  • Yellowing around the base: Inspect the lower root ball. Compacted substrate and poor drainage often show first through older leaves.
  • Brown edges: Review humidity, fertiliser strength and watering consistency. Large velvet blades show dry-air stress along the margins.
  • Weak petioles: Check the crown and roots for softness. Firm petioles depend on a healthy, hydrated root system.
  • Leaf deformation: Sudden humidity drops, pest feeding or root stress can affect leaves while they are still expanding.

Give the plant enough space for each leaf to open freely. Crowded placement can crease new growth or rub the velvet surface before the blade has hardened.

Anthurium magnificum handling safety

Anthurium magnificum should be kept away from pets and children that may chew plant material. It contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals that can cause oral irritation if plant material is chewed or swallowed. Keep it out of reach of pets and small children, and avoid contact with sap from cut or damaged tissue.

Anthurium magnificum botanical background

The accepted botanical name is Anthurium magnificum Linden, in the family Araceae. Anthurium refers to the tail-like spadix of the inflorescence. The epithet magnificum means magnificent or splendid.

Anthurium magnificum matures into broad velvet foliage with pale veins, four-angled petioles and a wide crown.

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★★★★★ 5
Final book in Treehouse of Horror.
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The book glows in the dark not he whole book just most of its front cover.
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Clarence A. Dillard, Jr.
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
They Saved the Best Material for Last
Format: Hardcover
The third and final Simpsons Treehouse of Horror Omnibus is here! Well, actually it debuted in August and I kept waiting on it to show up at my favorite comic book shop. But for one reason or another, the book never came. Once my guys determined that the distributors weren't going to fill the order request, I went to Amazon and ordered it myself. I hate not being able to support a local small business like that... 'Fiendish Fables of Devilish Delicacies' might be the best of the bunch. It features a bunch of celebrity writers taking horrifying shots at America's Favorite Family. Comedian Thomas Lennon and Rocker Rob Zombie are among those who contribute. But it was the re-pairing of 2 iconic teams from the pages of comic history that were my favorite out of all 3 volumes. Swamp Thing co-creators, Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson, join forces once again to pose a tale that suggests what might have happened if Homer was killed and put into a vat of Apu's Squishee mix to become the Squish Thing! Then Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan reunite to propose what would happen if Homer lead a team of vampire hunters against the dreaded Count Dracula. I must admit it took me a couple of pages to realize that this was a parody of Marvel's The Tomb of Dracula horror comic from the 70s and not a send-up of Universal's Dracula. However, once I did, I was enthralled because I cut my horror comic lovin' teeth on that series! Colan's artwork was so stunning. It looked 3-D. Artists today can barely make classic comic characters look 2-D. When you read that story, you are in the presence of genius. 2 geniuses! Speaking of bad art, there was one story called 'Boo-tleg' in which the Kwik-E-Mart is selling poisoned Halloween candy to the citizens of Springfield. To hide his crimes, Apu keeps making clones of the townsfolk. But the results are less than ideal. I get the premise of the story and I liked the satire of the effect cloning could have on society. Yet, the artwork looked like really poor computer animation. Like so bad, it makes the Dire Straits music video, 'Money For Nothing' look modern! One thing I had been missing were the covers. This book includes that much desired cover gallery. I still never got the Treehouse of Horror Halloween annuals printed in order; but at least I now have all of the material that would be included, if I owned the entire set. But there are lots of extras that only appeared in the trade collections. So that makes this a super-omnibus. Even with the near $150 I paid for all 3 volumes, I came out on top. Prices for some of those annuals are with price tags of $30-$50 each. No way in heck am I going shell out that type of money for a Simpsons floppy; no matter how much I love Halloween books! Now if only Harry N. Abrams would collect the Simpsons Winter Wingdings and other seasonal Holiday material in an omnibus or two... They saved the best material for last!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2024

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