henna

     

Henna or Hina (Lawsonia inermis, syn. L. alba) is a flowering plant, the sole species in the genus Lawsonia in the family Lythraceae. It is native to tropical an subtropical regions of Africa, southern Asia, and northern Australasia in semi-arid zones. Henna is a tall shrub or small tree, 2–6 m high. It is glabrous, multibranched with spine tipped branchlets. Leaves are opposite, entire, glabrous, sub-sessile, elliptical, and broadly lanceolate (1.5–5.0 cm x 0.5–2 cm), acuminate, having depressed veins on the dorsal surface. During the onset of precipitation intervals, the plant grows rapidly; putting out new shoots, then growth slows. The leaves gradually yellow and fall during prolonged dry or cool intervals. Henna flowers have four sepals and a 2 mm calyx tube with 3 mm spread lobes. Petals are obvate, white or red stamens inserted in pairs on the rim of the calyx tube. Ovary is four celled, style up to 5 mm long and erect. Fruits are small, brownish capsules, 4–8 mm in diameter, with 32–49 seeds per fruit, and open irregularly into four splits.Lawsone content in leaves is negatively associated with the number of seeds in the fruits.

Trivia about henna

  • Ancient Egyptians used this hair dye on the soles of their feet, too
  • A small shrub called the Egyptian privet provides this orange-red dye used to color hair
  • This plant yields a hair dye as well as as tint used in magical hand & foot tattoos
  • (Alex: Let's get the clue from Sarah this time) My temporary tattoo uses this dye that's also used to redden hair
  • This tall shrub is prized for the reddish dye obtained from its leaves that's used to color hair
  • The tattoo seen here was made with this reddish-orange dye