SKU: 23282986619
anthurium malato

anthurium malato Anthurium magnificum

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Description

anthurium malato Anthurium magnificumAnthurium magnificum Anthurium magnificum is a Colombian velvet Anthurium with broad heart shaped leaves, pale veins and four angled petioles. New leaves open soft, then harden into darker, firmer velvet leaves. The four sided petioles help separate it from similar velvet Anthuriums. They have narrow winged edges that become especially noticeable toward the upper part. Velvet leaves and four angled petioles Growth: Colombian epiphytic Anthurium with a

Anthurium magnificum

Anthurium magnificum is a Colombian velvet Anthurium with broad heart-shaped leaves, pale veins and four-angled petioles. New leaves open soft, then harden into darker, firmer velvet leaves.

The four-sided petioles help separate it from similar velvet Anthuriums. They have narrow winged edges that become especially noticeable toward the upper part.

Velvet leaves and four-angled petioles

  • Growth: Colombian epiphytic Anthurium with a central crown.
  • Leaf shape: Broad heart-shaped leaves with a deep sinus and rounded upper shoulders.
  • Surface: Velvet green leaves that become firmer with maturity.
  • Veins: Pale main veins are clear on mature leaves.
  • Petioles: Four-angled petioles with narrow winged edges.
  • Mature plant: A wider crown as the leaves broaden and the root system develops.

Colombian forest origin

Anthurium magnificum is native to Colombia, including Risaralda, Cundinamarca and Boyacá. It grows in wet tropical conditions, often with roots exposed to air rather than buried in dense soil. Indoors, it grows best with warm roots, filtered light and an open substrate.

New velvet leaves expand best when light, warmth and watering stay steady. The plant responds well when the root ball stays lightly moist, the mix stays airy and the crown is not buried during repotting.

Growing broad mature leaves

  • Light: Provide bright filtered light. Direct midday sun can scar the velvet leaf.
  • Watering: Water once the upper mix has started to dry, keeping the root ball lightly moist.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, coco chips or coarse fibre, perlite or pumice, and a modest moisture-holding part.
  • Humidity: Around 60–80% humidity helps large new leaves expand with fewer creases.
  • Temperature: Keep warm, around 20–28 °C, while new leaves are developing.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly but regularly during active growth.
  • Potting: Use a stable pot with strong drainage as the crown widens.
  • Repotting: Refresh the substrate before it breaks down. Keep the crown at the same level and keep petiole bases above the mix.
  • Leaf care: Dust mature leaves with a soft damp cloth. Leaf oils and hard wiping can mark velvet foliage.
  • Propagation: Divide mature plants only when they have separate growth points and healthy roots.

Common Anthurium magnificum issues

  • Small new leaves: Check root health, light, warmth and feeding while the next leaf is forming.
  • Yellowing near the base: Check the lower mix for compaction, poor drainage or stale moisture.
  • Brown edges: Review humidity, watering consistency, fertiliser strength and mineral buildup.
  • Weak petioles: Root stress, crown softness or dehydration can reduce petiole firmness.
  • Leaf deformation: Sudden humidity drops, pest feeding or root stress can affect soft expanding leaves.
  • Water-soaked edge marks: Keep the leaves dry and improve airflow if translucent marks start spreading.

Flowers on Anthurium magnificum

When mature, this species can produce a green to reddish spathe and a dark violet-toned spadix.

Plant safety

Keep this Anthurium away from pets and small children. Its calcium oxalate crystals can irritate the mouth, throat, skin and eyes, especially when sap from cut or damaged tissue is handled.

Botanical name

Anthurium refers to the spadix. The species name magnificum means magnificent or splendid.

Bright filtered light, fresh open substrate and steady warmth support broad velvet leaves on firm four-angled petioles.

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SKU: 23282986619

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4.6 ★★★★★
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M
Merritt
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 1
Please keep Kelly Thompson away from G.I. Joe!
Format: Paperback
I only read this because it was one of the mini series that was setting up the new Energon Universe of GI Joe. The other minis were quite good and I hoped this one would be the same. Nope. It’s terrible. Terrible dialogue, terrible characterization and terrible reimagining of several popular characters. The plot is bare bones, poorly executed, and often so contrived and cliched I'm convinced Thompson must have watched a bunch of ninja movies from the 80s before writing this and thought she was being clever for ripping them off. The art is passable but the artist definitely needs to work on his fight choreography and stop drawing women so jacked. Scarlett and Jinx look like they have been taking steroids. And let’s not forget that Thompson loves writing lesbians, so it’s heavily implied Scarlett and Jinx are a couple. Because that’s what modern audiences want to see, more historically hetero characters made gay. Thompson, like Tom King, needs to be kept far away from popular characters and just stick to creating her own original stories where she can work out her issues and fetishes away from the rest of the mainstream comic reading public. And if I ever see her name on another G.I. Joe comic I will most definitely avoid it like the plague. Just my two cents.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2025
J
James M. McBee
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 1
Painful Read
Format: Paperback
This is a painful read. I only got it because I’m reading the rest of the EU Booms.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2025
S
Verified Purchase
Sarah M
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Avatar is about reflecting real world issues, and this comic does not disappoint
Format: Paperback
I will admit that at first, I was disappointed that Turf Wars portrayed homophobia in the Avatar verse. My thought was that if this is a fictional world, why not just have homophobia not exist. But Avatar has always been about reflecting real world issues, and this comic handles those issues in a way that felt honest and close to home. It didn't feel like it was using homophobia to exploit the LGBT characters for drama. As a lesbian, I felt that I could relate deeply to the obstacles that Korra and Asami face while entering their relationship, and dealing with coming out. My girlfriend and I both come from conservative families, so it was important early on to communicate coming out boundaries with each other. When Asami hesitates toward immediately coming out to Korra's parents, this isn't portrayed as a negative thing, just that it's important for Korra and Asami to communicate about this. Another thing I loved was the look that Kya gives Korra and Asami, and how she's immediately able to recognize that they're in a relationship. I love that she becomes a support for them, and they have an LGBT mentor in their lives. That's what makes this comic special, to me. This doesn't just realistically portray an LGBT romantic relationship, it also portrays LGBT community, which I find is far rarer in media. It's virtually non-existent in children's media. The only other example I can think of is an episode of Danger & Eggs which features a pride parade. The media landscape is starved for healthy, realistic, and nuanced portrayals of LGBT couples, but what I hardly ever see is LBGT community and culture shown on top of that. I believe there is room in media for both fiction where homophobia doesn't exists, and fiction where it's portrayed with realism without exploitation. In these cases, it's important to show LGBT characters facing these struggles by finding community with each other. Connection through community is powerful. I don't know who I'd be if I didn't grow up without LGBT friends supporting me and guiding me throughout my coming out process. Seeing a comic portray that process is beautiful, and I hope that's the direction the creative world continues to go in. The art is gorgeous, and the story feels like a natural continuation of the television series. When I read the dialogue, I can hear the character's voices in my mind as if I were watching another episode. I'm excited to learn more about the Avatar universe, and watch Korra, Asami, and all the other characters continue to grow and develop with each other.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2017
M
Verified Purchase
Ms. Buttercup
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
I expected it to be good, but instead it's great.
Format: Paperback
A surprisingly re-readable little book. I really look forward to part 2! WRITING: Feels like a true continuation of the show. The characters and the world are just like a Season 5, Episode 1 might have been. Mako and Bolin were great together. Korra and Asami were great together. Of the supporting characters, I was glad to see Tenzin and Lin, and a little sad not to see Varrick or Wu. (Maybe they will fit naturally into the plot somewhere in book 2 or 3 of this series? If not, that's okay. It's better for writing to make sense than to have cameos.) ART: Wow. Just the right amount of additional detail for the comic format. I love the clarity of these panels and the camera shots chosen for them. How each character feels shows in their face and body. How a fight scene unfolds can be seen--you can actually tell what the characters do when they fight. It's wonderful. (I'm a bit of a fight scene enthusiast.) Also, the spirit world was whimsical and gorgeous to behold. Nice variety of lush color palettes for each scene. The new characters have distinctive faces, and the new villain has very cool-looking weapons.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 20, 2017
A
Verified Purchase
Angela
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
It's been three years.
Format: Paperback
This was a great read! It felt like I was actually watching an episode of Korra while flipping through this. Michael DiMartino did a good job at making the dialougue sound like it could've been part of a Korra script. Of course the plot isn't going to be too dramatic since poor Korra already dealt with most of the worst situations ever in the show. The tone is much calmer, with much of the comic's focus being on Korra and Asami's budding relationship and a realistic conflict involving a greedy businessman wanting to turn the spirit portal into a tourist attraction. This comic is very much a suitable continuation of the show. Irene Koh's art is so beautiful!! I love how it's not the typical children's comic cartoony style. I've heard that people have actually been complaining about how it's so different from the show's original style, but I personally think it's fitting and very charming. It gives it a more mature feel. My main complaint is that it's too short. It took nearly three years after the finale for this comic to be released and it's only 80 pages! And the next part isn't going to be released until January! I guess me and other Korra fans are just going to have to stay patient for another 6 months or so.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2017

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