Tea plant illustration

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Herbal Tea Illustration, Tea Tree Illustration, Tea Leaf Illustration, Green Tea Illustration, Tea Leaves Illustration, Tea Sketch, Tree Vector Png, Herbal Leaves, Hand Decor

Download this Sketch Style Tea Leaf Illustration, Tea Branches, Tea Tree, Sketch Style PNG clipart image with transparent background for free. Pngtree provides millions of free png, vectors, clipart images and psd graphic resources for designers.| 6569067

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Did you know Matcha comes from the Camellia sinensis plant? So do many green teas, but the processes dictate the final product! #matcha #health #education Cover Ups Tattoo, Magia Das Ervas, Tea Plant, Herbal Plants, Camellia Sinensis, Illustration Botanique, Healing Plants, Images Vintage, Plant Health

Botanical Name: Camellia sinensis. Camellia sinensis is the plant which white tea, green tea, oolong and black tea are all harvested from. The difference between those teas lies in how the tea plant is processed. Other Common Names: Mecha, gyokura, bancha, kukicha, Asian tea, senchu, Chinese tea, Japanese tea. Habitat: China, Tibet, India, Assam, Cambodia and Japan. Plant Description: The tea plant is native to Southeast Asia; cultivated in tropical and subtropical altitudes from sea level…

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Description  Tea consists of the dried leaves of a number of evergreen shrubs, natives of China or thereabouts. Tea is cultivated in China and India, as far north as latitude 45. It appears to thrive between 25 and 33 N. Latitude. It is extensively cultivated in Malacca, Java, and various portions of the English possessions in India. Tea was introduced into Europe by the Dutch in 1610. Tea Plant Illustration, Tea Leaf Tattoo, Tea Illustration Design, Tea Leaves Tattoo, Hatch Drawing, Plant Clipart, Leaves Drawing, Attack On Titan Tattoo, Woodcut Art

Tea consists of the dried leaves of a number of evergreen shrubs, natives of China or thereabouts. Tea is cultivated in China and India, as far north as latitude 45. It appears to thrive between 25 and 33 N. Latitude. It is extensively cultivated in Malacca, Java, and various portions of the English possessions in India. Tea was introduced into Europe by the Dutch in 1610.

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