As long as they're getting plenty of very bright light, and regular watering (without letting them sit in wet soil for too long), they'll reward you with gorgeous foliage and infrequent flowers that are as much a surprise as they are a delight. Some cultivars or species require slightly different care than others, but for the most part, tradescantia are a very easy plant to grow, either as houseplants or outdoors in the summer or in warmer climates. I hope this photo and the others included in this guide help you identify which variety you have! The photo above shows the difference between four of the most popular tradescantia varieties we carry - top is Callisia repens Bianca, bottom row from left is Lilac, Lavender, and Rainbow. This is a work in progress-and, I've come to realize, always will be! Some information may not be complete, so check back periodically to see if it's been updated! Thank you for your patience and understanding! ~Diana With hundreds of species and cultivars in the world, it's nearly impossible to cover them all, but I'll do my best to keep this updated to reflect any that we have in our collection. This post aims to cover care for all of the varieties we carry, including some that are currently not for sale (see the end for a complete list of what's in our collection). It helps avoid the confusion that can arise over common names shared by different plants, among other benefits. I'm also a firm believer in trying to learn and use the botanical names for plants. A movement is gaining traction to change or stop the use of that common name, due to its sensitive connotations, so we refer to it here by its scientific name. Tradescantia, commonly known as Wandering Jew, are some of the most popular and commonly grown houseplants in the world. Tradescantia varieties cover the entire spectrum of the rainbow-you'll even find blue among the flowers of some species. It seems to be a Lightroom problem, since it's happening with multiple cards and readers, but I just don't know anymore.Pink. I uninstalled and reinstalled Creative Cloud and Lightroom.On other photos, the stripes stay in both panes. On some photos, the stripes appear in the Library pane, but go away in Develop pane.The problem persisted, but on fewer photos. I saved the photos to my hard drive, and imported from there, rather than directly from the card.I imported the photos to LR on a different machine - an iMac - and the photos are fine.I tried the cards in a different camera, imported, and the files were fine.I have tried two different card readers attached to USB-C.I have tried using different SD cards in the camera.If I delete, and re-import, the stripes show up on different photos - some the same, some new, some previously striped photos look fine. They only show on some photos, not every single one. The stripes are in the same exact spot on different photos. I import, as usual, and the photos then show four pink stripes. On the new MacBook, the photos look fine on the hard drive, and in the import screen in LR. Tried an import on an older iMac, and things worked just fine. I have a new MacBook Pro and that is where I'm having the issue. I'm importing photos into Lightroom (Classic 8.0) shot on a Fuji X100T. I am experiencing a strange problem and can't seem to find a solution.
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