SKU: 42551907793
philodendron giganteum var blizzard

philodendron giganteum var blizzard Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large – INDONESIAPLANTS

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Description

philodendron giganteum var blizzard Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large – INDONESIAPLANTSSee photos for reference to the plant features only. They are likely sent to you as featured with the descriptions below. Minimum of 3 Leaves Plants shipped will have a minimum of 3 leaves and will be rooted, not cuttings. Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large: The Majestic and Bold Choice for Your Collection Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large takes the beauty of its smaller counterpart to the next level, offering larger, more

See photos for reference to the plant features only. They are likely sent to you as featured with the descriptions below.

Minimum of 3 Leaves

Plants shipped will have a minimum of 3 leaves and will be rooted, not cuttings.

Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large: The Majestic and Bold Choice for Your Collection

Philodendron Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large takes the beauty of its smaller counterpart to the next level, offering larger, more expansive leaves with vibrant variegation. If you're looking for a statement plant to dominate your space, this variety delivers on size, beauty, and distinctiveness.

Distinctive Features of Giganteum Blizzard Variegated Large:

  • Massive Leaves: The larger leaves of this variety create a bold statement, offering more room for the striking variegation to show.
  • Striking White and Green Contrast: Its vibrant white and green pattern contrasts beautifully, making it a unique addition to any room.
  • Impressive Growth: Expect impressive and dramatic growth, making this plant a centerpiece in any space.

Program (What this specimen does in a room)
This large ‘Blizzard’ acts as a single-piece focal wall: broad, shield-to-paddle leaves carry painterly snow-white, cream, and soft mint patterns over deep green. The plant’s self-heading habit keeps the footprint clean while delivering vertical presence and generous leaf planes that read from across open living spaces, studios, and lobby-scale entries. Place one and the corner goes from empty to curated—scale, light, and quiet drama in one move.

Envelope & Massing (Form at this size)
Expect a composed, multi-leaf crown supported by confident petioles. Mature blades are wide and slightly arched, presenting a satin glow rather than hard gloss. Large specimens feel architectural: not a vine, but a sculptural clump with a strong central axis. Variegation is naturally variable—some leaves show broad white sectors, others fine freckling or mint wash—so the canopy reads like a gallery of related “prints.” Align final color language to your photos for accuracy.

Light Model (How to illuminate it)

  • Best case: Bright, diffused daylight all day (east glow or a luminous window behind sheers). Even luminance keeps white sectors crisp and greens saturated.
  • Photo tip: Angle side light to skim along the midrib; the pale panels “light up” and cast soft shadows on pale walls.
  • Caution: Prolonged, unfiltered noon sun can warm tender white tissue; filter rather than relocate.

Substrate Spec (Root zone engineering)

  • Blend: ~40% chunky orchid bark, 25% coco fiber/coir, 20% pumice or perlite, 10% horticultural charcoal, ~5% long-fiber sphagnum as a gentle buffer.
  • Intent: Air first, even moisture second; the coarse fraction prevents compaction in larger planters.
  • Vessel: Tall, drainage-forward container; matte stone, sand, oatmeal, or charcoal finishes frame the snow-on-green story.

Hydrology (Water rhythm you can repeat)
Water thoroughly when the top 2–3 cm (≈1 in) of mix dries, then allow full runoff. A calm cadence maintains edge quality on high-white areas and prevents edema on big blades. In brighter seasons you’ll water slightly more often; in darker months, extend the interval modestly.

Operations (Daily/weekly stewardship)

  • Nutrition: Light feeding at ¼–½ strength during active months for confident sizing and color clarity. Prioritize light quality before extra feed.
  • Air & Climate: Comfortable at 18–29 °C (65–85 °F) with ~50–70% RH and gentle airflow (no AC/heater blasts on foliage).
  • Grooming: Wipe two leaves weekly with a soft cloth so white sectors photograph clean; remove spent sheaths for a polished crown.
  • Rotation: Quarter-turn every two weeks so color expression remains even around the canopy.
  • Centering: Though largely self-heading, a discreet stake can keep the crown upright as leaves size up.

Failure Modes → Corrections (Quick diagnostics)

  • Brown on white sectors: Usually late watering or unfiltered midday sun → tighten cadence; add sheer coverage.
  • Long gaps / smaller leaves: Increase overall luminance (still filtered); keep the newest leaf in your brightest safe pocket.
  • Perpetually wet mix: Boost bark/pumice fraction or step down one pot size to restore aeration.
  • Dull new growth: Confirm light first; resume gentle feeding only after brightness is optimized.

Materiality & Styling (How to make it sing)
Pair with warm neutrals—raw oak, rattan, travertine—or go editorial with graphite and microcement. Keep accessories low-gloss so the leaf planes lead. In open plans, flank a window or anchor a console; leave 20–30 cm (8–12 in) behind the planter so large leaves cast soft, dimensional shadows. Complement with one contrasting companion (velvety Anthurium or matte-leaf Scindapsus) to highlight texture without crowding the composition. As with many aroids, place foliage out of nibbling reach.

Large ‘Blizzard’ brings instant finish to big spaces: luminous color, generous scale, and a calm, sculptural posture that upgrades a room in a single placement.

Kindly reach out to us at [email protected] if you have difficulties in your purchase or have any questions.

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V. Young
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This book was insightful yet the stories was shocking but its a dose of reality. I like the product and its great for my library.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2014
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An informative read that will make you sick as the hanging death of people becomes a spectator sport. I knew going in I was going to be really angry about this and I was so right. It has been more than a month since I finished it and the horrific cruelty and lawlesness still makes my blood boil.And many times the "supposed law" were guilty of opening the jail or were complicit in letting this happen. It will make you think.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2013
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Jerry Saperstein
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★★★★★ 5
A valuable book for non-lawyers and lawyers
Why would non-lawyers want to read a book on persuading judges? For several reasons actually. First, many of us are involved in work that requires persuading others to adopt our views. While legal argument is substantially more formal and rule-driven than what most of us do, learning how to construct a logical argument as if it were to be delivered to the court, that Is governed by deadlines, restrictions on length, the need to adhere to established fact (or to establish those facts) and to be neither groveling nor inflammatory can be applied to selling your widgets. Perhaps more important is the fact that most people don't understand the impact of the court's decisions on our daily lives, our pocketbooks and our freedoms. Nine people sit on the Supreme Court. They cannot be removed except for the most grievous crimes and then only if Congress were to agree. More than one Justice has demonstrated that you can be senile and sit on the nation's highest court. Going down the food chain, the same applies to the federal appellate and trial courts. It is unlikely that one person in a hundred can even name a local federal district court judge and probably not one in a thousand could name the nine Supreme Court justices. Yet these men and women have tremendous impact on our lives, as do the thousands of state court justices. I am not a lawyer, but I consult to them and am not a stranger to the courtroom, writing drafts for legal briefs, doing legal research and the like. I have seen a lot of judges in action and have learned, in general, to fear them. They can - and do - cause tremendous harm through ill-considered decisions, making decisions with insufficient facts, assuming they know more than they do and myriad other reasons. They are gods in their courtrooms and if your lawyer fails to persuade them of the justness of your cause, you lose. Just how do these people reach their decisions? While justice is supposed to be blind (fat chance!), the justices are human and thus persuadable. Bryan Garner is a noted writer on legal writing. He is actually quite witty as he explains the use of the English language to lawyers who have had their understanding of words driven out of them in law school. Antonin Scalia is a hero to many for the courageousness of his decisions and dissents, his belief that the Constitution is to be strictly interpreted and his generally brilliant writing style. In 115, frequently witty, short chapters the two authors (who occasionally openly disagree) lay down their thoughts on how judges can be persuaded. It is not all about legal writing; e.g, advice to not chew your fingernails and dressing appropriately for court. They advise on giving your oral argument, which a lot of sales and marketing people would do well to read, especially the guidance to "never speak over a judge". In a sales situation, I am surprised at how often the sales person displays his or her contempt for me by not only not listening to me, but presuming they understand the point I was going to make before they spoke over me. I don't know about you, but a lot of salespeople have lost business with me for doing that. Some of the points the authors make are points of contention themselves: i.e., "swear off substantive footnotes - or not". None of the material in this book is truly new. Law students get elements of it in their first year as do some college students. A lot can be found in books on to be a better salesperson: i.e., don't chew your fingernails, etc. And a lot of it is plain commonsense. But that doesn't mean this book is unhelpful. First, it reveals in tiny part how Scalia evaluates the briefs he reads and arguments he hears, which in itself is a fascinating peek. The authors also put things many people may have forgotten through lack of use into perspective. Finally, they remind lawyers and non-lawyers alike that you often have only one shot at winning your argument so you had best put your best foot forward. Scalia and Garner show you how to do it. Overall, this is a fun, informative and helpful read. Jerry
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