  This 
				is another of the All-time Classics of hostas. It was registered by 
						The American Hosta Society in 1986 under the hyphenated name 
						H. ventricosa 'Aureo-marginata' on behalf of English 
				nurseryman, Alan Bloom 
				according to 
							The Hosta Handbook 
							by Mark Zilis (2000).   Later it was determined 
							that this cultivar actually originated with Karel Hensen of the 
					Netherlands.   
							It is a large size 
							plant about 22 inches high with a spread of around 
							47 inches. The medium to dark green foliage has a 
							yellow to creamy white marginal variegation. Its 
							leaves are broadly ovate with a heart shaped base, 
							shiny on the bottom and have a twisted tip. Bright 
							purple, bell-shaped flowers with stripes bloom in 
							July. 
						
						
						 The Genus Hosta by W. George Schmid (1991) changed the name to its current, 
						H. ventricosa 
				'Aureomarginated'. In 1993, Karel Hensen of the 
						Netherlands  was 
				credited by 
						The American Hosta Society with actually introducing this plant. 
						According to
						
						The Hostapedia by Mark Zilis (2009), "Just the addition of a creamy margin to 
						H. ventricosa created one of the most outstanding hosta cultivars 
				in existence." 
							
						 Nomenclature changes recommended in the 
1991 book The 
Genus Hosta  by 
	W. George Schmid and accepted by The American Hosta Society  would update names as follows: H. ventricosa 'Aureomaculata' 
and H. ventricosa 'Aureomarginata'. 
							
			  
							
						
						 An article about H. ventricosa   'Aureo-maculata' and 'Aureo-marginata' by W. George Schmid  in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (1985 Vol. 16) states that, "H. ventricosa   is one of the oldest hostas in cultivation...The variegated form of H. 
ventricosa that is now identified with the cultivar name of 'Aureo-marculata' 
can be traced back to 
P.F. von Siebold's time. In 1876, E. Regel published a 
paper on hostas in Germany and in it referred to a "Funkia ovata forma 
aureovariegata."...as a possible synonym for 'Aureo-maculata' form." 
						 
						An article  by C.H. Falstad about the stability of colors in hosta leaves in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (2006 Vol. 37 No. 1) says, "However, in a 
variegated plant, when the cells don't stay in place, the leaves can end up all 
one color, as when 'Guacamole'...goes back to 'Fried Green Tomatoes'...In rare 
instances, a complete pattern reversal can occur, as with 'Flame Stitch'...from 
H. ventricosa   'Aureomarginata'...and 'Eskimo 
Pie'...from 'Northern Exposure'..." 
						 
						  
						
			   
				
					
						
							
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						1975 #5 
						1985 #7 
						1990 #6 | 
						1991 #6 
						1992 #6 
						1993 #11 | 
						1994 #12 
						1996 #17 | 
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