Although she was not trained as a botanist or commissioned as a professional artist, she was the author of several artistic and scientific plant illustrations She began to draw plants from the glasshouse at her family home 'Fairfield', She modeled her proposed book, then tentatively named ‘Drawings of lilies’, on William Roscoe's Monandrian Plants (1824–8), with the plates to be accompanied by brief letterpresses based on her notes and even used Roscoe's book prospectus as a model for her own. In it, she advertised her ‘Drawings of Liliaceous Plants arranged by Botanists in the genera Crinum, Amaryllis, Pancratium …’, to appear in ten numbers, each of five plates to be lithographed by Hullmandel, subscribers paying a guinea a number, others 27s. In 1831 Priscilla Bury's drawings began to be published as 'A Selection of Hexandrian Plants', the large (64 cm × 48 cm) plates being engraved by Robert Havell; the work had only seventy-nine subscribers, and it is unlikely that the number produced was much beyond that, accounting for its scarcity, which is noted by both Stafleu and Cowan and Pritzel. Fifty-one plates appeared in ten fascicles, the last in 1834, but whether or not the text is Bury's is unclear. The plates are fine-grained aquatints, partly printed in color and retouched by hand... The published work has been praised as "certainly one of the most effective colour-plate folios of its period". The engraving was entrusted to the Londoner
Robert Havell, engraver of the
John James Audubon (1785-1851) plates. The book was carried out in
aquatint and the 350 plant drawings painted in part by hand. The subscribers to this large folio numbered only 79, mostly from the Lancashire region,
Audubon being one of them. Her later work after 1836 consisted of eight plates for
Maund and Henslow's
The Botanist and photographs of her drawings were included in
Figures of Remarkable Forms of Polycystins, or Allied Organisms, in the Barbados Chalk deposit in 1860–1861, followed by new expanded editions in 1865 and 1869. The fossils had been collected by John Davy and prepared for microscopy by
Christopher Johnson of
Lancaster. == Gallery ==