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hawaiian palm plant

hawaiian palm plant Brighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm' – Foliage Factory

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Description

hawaiian palm plant Brighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm' – Foliage FactoryBrighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm' Brighamia insignis, often called Hawaii Palm in cultivation, is a Hawaiian lobelioid with a swollen succulent stem and a compact crown of glossy green leaves. The palm like common name comes from its shape; botanically, it belongs to Campanulaceae, the bellflower family. The plant grows from a thickened trunk that stores water and narrows toward the top, where the leaves gather into a rounded rosette. Mature leaves are

Brighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm'

Brighamia insignis, often called Hawaii Palm in cultivation, is a Hawaiian lobelioid with a swollen succulent stem and a compact crown of glossy green leaves. The palm-like common name comes from its shape; botanically, it belongs to Campanulaceae, the bellflower family.

The plant grows from a thickened trunk that stores water and narrows toward the top, where the leaves gather into a rounded rosette. Mature leaves are spoon-shaped, slightly fleshy and bright to dark green, giving the plant a clean upright outline in a pot. Established plants may produce fragrant cream to yellow tubular flowers from the crown under suitable conditions.

Bottle-stem traits

  • Succulent, bottle-shaped stem topped with a leafy crown
  • Glossy spoon-shaped leaves arranged in a compact rosette
  • Hawaiian endemic species from rocky coastal cliff habitats
  • Fragrant pale yellow flowers on mature plants under suitable conditions
  • Best grown warm and bright in a sharply draining potting mix

Stem form, island origin and growth pattern

Brighamia insignis is endemic to Hawai‘i, with a natural range recorded from Kaua‘i and Niʻihau. In habitat it grows on rocky ledges and steep coastal cliffs with limited soil, exposed air movement and fast drainage. Its thick stem suits fast drainage, exposed air movement and a potting mix that dries predictably after watering.

In containers, Brighamia usually stays much smaller than wild plants described from natural habitats. The plant forms a single-stemmed or lightly branching succulent shrub with leaves held mostly at the top. Older lower leaves naturally yellow and drop as the crown renews, gradually revealing more of the trunk.

Care for Brighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm'

  • Light: Set it in bright indirect light with gentle direct morning or late-afternoon sun. In too little light, the crown can thin and lean toward the window.
  • Watering: Soak the mix fully, then allow it to dry well before the next watering. The stem stores water, so constantly damp roots are the main risk indoors.
  • Substrate: Use a mineral, cactus-style or very airy succulent mix with pumice, lava rock, coarse sand or similar drainage material.
  • Pot choice: Choose a pot with drainage holes. A heavier pot helps balance the top-held rosette and reduces tipping as the stem gains height.
  • Temperature: Maintain steady warmth around 18–26 °C and avoid cold draughts or drops below 15 °C.
  • Humidity: Normal household humidity is suitable when airflow is steady and the substrate dries correctly.
  • Feeding: Apply a weak balanced fertiliser during active growth, then stop or reduce feeding while winter growth is slow.
  • Repotting: Refresh the pot when roots fill the container or the mix has broken down. Move up one pot size and keep the crown stable after repotting.
  • Leaf care: Remove fully yellowed lower leaves by hand once they detach easily. Pulling firm green tissue can damage the crown.
  • Outdoor summer placement: A sheltered outdoor position can suit warm summer weather after gradual acclimation, with protection from heavy rain, cold nights and harsh midday sun.

What to watch on Brighamia

  • Yellow lower leaves: A few older leaves dropping from the base of the crown is normal. Many yellowing leaves at once can point to cold, root stress or repeated overwatering.
  • Soft stem base: Check the root zone immediately. A soft, dark or collapsing base usually means the mix has stayed wet too long.
  • Thin crown growth: Increase light gradually and rotate the pot so the stem stays upright.
  • Spider mites: Fine webbing, stippled leaves or dull new growth can appear in warm dry conditions. Rinse the crown carefully and treat early.
  • Leaf drop after shipping: Temporary shedding can happen after transport. Keep the plant warm, bright and evenly managed while the crown resumes growth.

Conservation-linked growing notes

Brighamia insignis has become strongly associated with conservation horticulture because wild populations declined severely and cultivated plants help preserve the species. In cultivation, the most important signs to watch are a firm stem, active crown growth and a root zone that stays airy between waterings.

Safe handling

Brighamia insignis is an ornamental plant and should not be eaten. Place it out of reach of pets and children that chew plants. If sap or plant material contacts sensitive skin, wash the area with water.

Name origin and botanical background

The accepted name is Brighamia insignis A.Gray. The genus Brighamia honours William Tufts Brigham, the first director of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in Honolulu. The Latin epithet insignis means outstanding, remarkable or distinguished, referring well to the plant’s unusual stem and crown form.

Brighamia insignis 'Hawaii Palm' holds a glossy green crown above a swollen bottle-shaped base.

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Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Must have!
Format: Hardcover
Excellent. Not just pictures but also retrospective commentary, better in that than some other game art books out there which are just images without context. And of course these games are incredibly artful and the images themselves are worth looking at. Beautiful book inside and out
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2026
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Amr
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect
Format: Hardcover
This was my first book purchase, top notch quality and the feeling every page as you touch and turn it is satisfying, delivery was also earlier than anticipated. Some of the concept art in the book is available online if you know where to look, but there are some never seen before art in there too, plus the tidbits shared by the developers is nice and gives cool behind the scenes information, overall a great deal for any Deus Ex fan.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2024
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Christian Romero
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Yes, I Absolutely Asked For This.
Format: Hardcover
The Art of the Deus Ex Universe is a gorgeous artbook that encompasses Eidos Montreal’s past two Deus Ex games, Deus Ex Human Revolution and Deus Ex Mankind Divided. It starts with the foreword by the creator of Deus Ex Warren Spector who talks about the game he created being a classic and giving his approval of the latest games saying they keep the spirit of the original alive. From there you get five chapters of great art and behind the scenes commentary by the Art Director Jonathan Jacques-Belletete and Martin Dubeau. The five chapters are in order characters, weapons and tech, locations, the breach, and in-game adverts. The last two are short and brief compared to the first three chapters. You see the concepts on how they nailed the uniques aesthetic designs of Human Revolution and Mankind Divided. The “cyber-renaissance” look, as the art director calls it. The art style of these games give off a Cyberpunk dystopian look; that does not seem too far fetched to believe might happen. The Art of the Deus Ex Universe is a fantastic art book you get two games in one art book. You get good looking art concepts and fun making of Deus Ex facts. Such as the colors pink, violet and purple do not exist in the world of Deus Ex giving the visual metaphor of Eliza Cassan being an AI as she the only person who wears purple in the entire two games. There are many fun facts like that all over the art book as well as the beautiful artwork. A must for Deus Ex afficandos!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2018
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David K. H.
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Even if you're not big into books, you totally asked for this one!
Format: Hardcover
Eidos Montreal's work in the Deus Ex series is a standout in the science fiction genre in terms of art direction. The art design in their games is a unique mixture of classical elegance and technological achievement; it is both gorgeous in some ways and somber in others. This book is an excellent showcase of art, and it also provides meaningful developer commentary on the rationale behind many designs seen in the games. Overall, this artbook is excellent, and a must-have for fans of the series who enjoyed the art design of the games.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2023
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Joshua Klessig
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
a nice retrospective of the art of the Deus Ex Universe
Format: Hardcover
Overall, a nice retrospective of the art of the Deus Ex Universe. However, there are areas where it could have further excelled. More in-game, non-character model, non-landscape art would have been great (they give you a few pages of in-game posters and the like, I would have preferred that they covered more of this). There is a smattering of things that were designed but not used, I would have loved to see that explored as it's own section in the book. We know that they had planned, at one time, to have things take place in a few more locales in Human Revolution, it would have been great to see some of the early concept art for those sections. Neither of the mobile Deus Ex games were touched upon at all in the book. Granted there isn't much material that could be covered with them, but nonetheless, a page or two about them would have been nice. My biggest complaint? The book is just barely too tall to fit on my bookshelf.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2016

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