CAMELLIA JAPONICA FIMBRIATA. 
Fringed. Double White Camellia. 
Camellia Japonica Fimbriata. Loddiges’s Botanical Cabinet, t. 1103. 
Transactions of Hort. Soc. Vol. 7. 
THE limits of the publication above referred to, in which we have 
noticed this fine variety, prevented us from entering so minutely into 
detail respecting it, as we are enabled to do in the present work. We 
briefly stated that its habit, growth, and general character, coincided 
almost in every respect with that of the Double White, which we 
have already figured and described. So far we were perfectly correct; 
although, upon a more rigid examination of the two sorts, we have 
remarked, that the habit of the one now under consideration, is rather 
more loose and branching; and that, in consequence of its flowering 
less freely than the Double White, it is usually more vigorous in its 
growth. 
The foliage of the two plants is much undulated, and about the 
same in size and form. The colour is also similar, both being of a 
vivid, shining green, considerably paler than that of the red flowering 
varieties, and more marked with pale-coloured veins on the upper 
side. 
The flower buds are large and nearly round, of a pale silvery green 
colour, densely clothed with pubescence. 
The flowers may be described as being about the same size as those 
of the Double White, with the petals arranged in a similar manner, and 
with equal regularity over one above another, although not quite so 
numerous. The outer petals are generally reflexed; the inner somewhat 
concave, and pointed. The most remarkable character, however, is, 
that all of them have their edges ciliated, or fringed; a peculiarity not 
