Okay that settles it - serrated edges and not lace. Thanks for the information it helps me a lot.
Janet Smith
California
Zone 7
P.S. My first TB opened today, can I find the tag to tell you which one - no the ground squirrel liked it better so now I have a NOID. Rats - ah - squirrels!
On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 6:14 PM, Paul
<a*@yahoo.com> wrote:
I've only seen lace refer to the crispy/bubbled textured edges, not the pinked style or serrated edges. It's possible I suppose that it could be part of the lace complex. I have never had any lace show up in my seedlings, but I do believe it is recessive. I did have one diploid seedling develop the pinking/serration as in yours and I kept it for that reason.
--- In i*@yahoogroups.com, Annette Milch <tmilchh@...> wrote:
>
>
> I think this is lace.
> Annette
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Linda Mann <lmann@...>
> To: iris-photos <i*@yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Fri, May 4, 2012 9:22 am
> Subject: [iris-photos] Re: HYB: seedling DK-y
>
>
>
>
> Annette, I'm not really sure what color it is - orangish yellow gold?
> If it's bloomed before this year, I suspect it mostly just looks dark
> yellow in a "normal" season, whatever that means any more. From a
> distance, it looks sort of orange, up close more gold.
>
> > Nice ruffling in the standards. What color would you call it?
>
> Janet, it doesn't have that warty kind of rumpled stuff that seems to be
> what most folks call lace, but the edges are serrated. I hadn't notice
> the edges till you asked. Not sure if this is considered lace by others
> or not.
>
> > Would you consider the edges lacy?
>
> Linda Mann east TN USA zone 7b
>