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  2. Phormium tenax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phormium_tenax

    Tūī on New Zealand flax. Phormium tenax (called flax in New Zealand English; harakeke in Māori; New Zealand flax [1] [2] outside New Zealand; and New Zealand hemp [1] in historical nautical contexts) is an evergreen perennial plant native to New Zealand and Norfolk Island that is an important fibre plant and a popular ornamental plant. [3]

  3. Phormium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phormium

    Phormium tenax flowers have the same curvature as the beak of the nectar-eating tūī seen in the photograph. Phormium tenax - MHNT. Phormium is an herbaceous perennial monocot. The tough, sword-shaped leaves grow up to 3 metres (10 ft) long and up to 125 millimetres (5 in) wide. They are usually darkish green but sometimes have coloured edges ...

  4. Flax in New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flax_in_New_Zealand

    Hōne Heke (centre) wearing a short checked flax and feather cloak and flax skirt. His uncle Kawiti is on the right in a flax cloak. New Zealand flax describes the common New Zealand perennial plants Phormium tenax and Phormium colensoi, known by the Māori names harakeke and wharariki respectively.

  5. Māori traditional textiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_traditional_textiles

    Kaitaka are cloaks of finely woven muka (Phormium tenax) fibre. [31] Kaitaka are among the more prestigious forms of traditional Māori dress. They are made from muka (flax fibre), which is in turn made from those varieties of Phormium tenax that yield the finest quality fibre characterised by a silk-like texture and rich golden sheen. Kaitaka ...

  6. Orthoclydon praefectata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthoclydon_praefectata

    The habitat/food plant for this moth is the New Zealand native flax Phormium tenax. [2] Life cycle. Eggs. Eggs are straw coloured and are laid on the underside of the ...

  7. Phormium colensoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phormium_colensoi

    Phormium colensoi (syn. Phormium cookianum – see below), also called mountain flax, or wharariki in Māori, is a perennial plant that is endemic to New Zealand. [5] The greenish, yellow or orange flowers are followed by twisted seed pods. [5] It is less common than the other Phormium species, P. tenax or harakeke.

  8. Saint Helena scrub and woodlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Helena_scrub_and...

    By the 19th century the native woodlands had mostly disappeared. Plantations of New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax) were established after 1900 to produce fiber for string and rope. Demand for flax fiber collapsed in the 1960s, and most of the flax plantations were abandoned. [1]

  9. Tāniko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tāniko

    The traditional weaving material is muka, fibre prepared from the New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax) by scraping, pounding and washing. The muka fibre was dyed using natural dyes . There has been a resurgence of tāniko and other Māori cultural practices starting in the 1950s and as part of the broader Māori Renaissance .