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Taking time to live well
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Taking Time to Live Well

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Photograph: Narrative

Photograph: Narrative

Science | How Buttercups Tell you if you Like Butter

Iona Bower May 30, 2021

Lift up your chins and we’ll tell you how it’s done

Remember holding a buttercup under your friends’ chins to see if they liked butter? We can’t help thinking that a more accurate way to ascertain this may simply be to offer them a slice of bread and ask if they want it buttered or not, but that would be less fun, if more scientific. 

There is some science at play here though. If you want to know why buttercups really shine a yellow light on your neck, here it is:

It’s all about attracting pollinators. The vibrant yellow shade of the buttercup comes from pigments in the surface layer of the petals. If you look closely you’ll see that they also seem to be heavily glossed, an effect created by layers of air just below the surface of the petals, which reflects the light back. So when you hold one under your chin, it will shine a little yellow light onto your skin. The brighter and glossier the buttercup and the sunnier the day, the more likely you are to ‘like butter’.. The way buttercups seem to glow and light up the lawn is actually unique in the plant world. No other plant reflects colour and light in quite the same way.

Now we’ve ruined that bit of summer-flower-related magic for you, we feel we ought to make amends. Here’s a little blog we published a while ago about the story behind playing ‘he loves me, he loves me not’ with daisies. Daisy, daisy, give me your answer do, indeed. 

From the blousy paper daisies on the front cover to our buttercups in the house, pictured above, the new June issue is chock full of floral fun. We hope it brings a little cheer to you, too. 

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our June issue…

Featured
Fruit Iced Tea Gathering.jpeg
Mar 14, 2026
Tipple | Fruit Iced Tea
Mar 14, 2026
Mar 14, 2026
Harriet Russell wellbeing languages.jpg
Mar 12, 2026
Learn | 'Just for Fun' Languages
Mar 12, 2026
Mar 12, 2026
Just So Festival - LEAD IMAGE 2026.jpeg
Mar 11, 2026
Competition | Win a Family Ticket to Just So Festival worth £500
Mar 11, 2026
Mar 11, 2026

More floral fun and games…

Featured
Alamy Daffodils.jpg
Mar 9, 2024
Poetry | Carpets of Flowers
Mar 9, 2024
Mar 9, 2024
Posy.jpg
Jun 4, 2023
Flowers | The Meaning of Posies
Jun 4, 2023
Jun 4, 2023
poundedflowerart.jpg
Jul 3, 2022
Make | Pounded Flower Art
Jul 3, 2022
Jul 3, 2022


 

In gardening Tags issue 108, flowers in the house, flowers, flower facts, buttercups
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Photography: Emma Harris

Photography: Emma Harris

Garden pedantry | Don't call me 'Petal'

Iona Bower August 30, 2020

Ever said, ‘Hello, Petal’ to a bunch of dahlias? You’d have been incorrect!

We featured this fabulously blousy bunch of dahlias in our September issue and were inspired to find out a bit more about dahlias. As well as learning that the Aztecs grew dahlia tubers as a food crop, we were most fascinated to learn that each ‘petal’ is actually called a ‘floret’ (yes, like broccoli) and is a flower in its own right.

So all those colourful petals are not petals at all but individual flowers. Suddenly that bunch of dahlias seems even more like excellent value for money!

Read more about Dahlias in our September issue, on sale now.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our September issue…

Featured
Keeping warm Kavel Rafferty.JPG
Sep 20, 2020
How to | stay warm outside on cooler evenings
Sep 20, 2020
Sep 20, 2020
Larks and Owls Shutterstock.JPG
Sep 19, 2020
Are you a night owl or a lark?
Sep 19, 2020
Sep 19, 2020
Good mood food.JPG
Sep 15, 2020
Recipe | Sweet potato with cauliflower and minted yoghurt
Sep 15, 2020
Sep 15, 2020

More flower facts…

Featured
Alamy Daffodils.jpg
Mar 9, 2024
Poetry | Carpets of Flowers
Mar 9, 2024
Mar 9, 2024
Posy.jpg
Jun 4, 2023
Flowers | The Meaning of Posies
Jun 4, 2023
Jun 4, 2023
poundedflowerart.jpg
Jul 3, 2022
Make | Pounded Flower Art
Jul 3, 2022
Jul 3, 2022
In Nest Tags flowers in the house, flowers, cut flowers, flower facts
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Featured
 MARCH ISSUE   Buy  ,   download  or  subscribe   Pre-order a copy of  our new Homebird bookazine   Buy  Flourish Volume 4 , our wellbeing bookazine Order our  our new Celebrations Anthology   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Listen to  our
Feb 27, 2026
Feb 27, 2026

MARCH ISSUE

Buy, download or subscribe

Pre-order a copy of our new Homebird bookazine

Buy Flourish Volume 4, our wellbeing bookazine
Order our our new Celebrations Anthology

See the sample of our latest issue here

Listen to our podcast – Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2026
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The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

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