fake.. both of them.. not real.. I can see the strings.
Agree with mass, the shadows are all wrong. This was done on the same sound stage as the moon landing I think.
The size is an illusion, as both images are cropped to the same size so as to give a good side-by-side comparison. The 'Hummer's Giant' is larger, being 5.5cm, compared to 4.5cm for the "Big Boy". "Big Boy" has the potential to be as large or larger than 'Hummer's Giant' but as with all Cephalotus clone characteristics it is dependant on conditions. In this case, the 'Hummer's Giant' is growing on a windowsill that doesn't get much daylength this time of year, whereas the "Big Boy" was under 13 hours of artificial lighting. There is said to be a trade-off with Cephalotus between colouration and size.Nice photo's you can really see them well. The Cephalotus 'Hummer's Giant' does have a tiny bit larger rib.
What are the pitcher measurements?
Obviously the ability to discern details varies widely between individuals.
Other than the more obvious pigmentation differences, and that they seem to be very similar in overall size. There are many differences: the lids are slightly different in size, shape, and completely different in vein and fenestration patterns. The collars are different, one is wider than the other and the bottom collar ridge differs in thickness. The side wings, coming up at an angle on the sides of the pitchers are more rounded on the green pitcher than the red one and the green pitcher bulges out more uniformly towards its base than the red one. There are also many more subtle variations that are more difficult to describe. I'm sure there are even differences that I do not notice. I know several people whose eye for detail is quite amazing, going way beyond, even my own.
The size is an illusion, as both images are cropped to the same size so as to give a good side-by-side comparison. The 'Hummer's Giant' is larger, being 5.5cm, compared to 4.5cm for the "Big Boy". "Big Boy" has the potential to be as large or larger than 'Hummer's Giant' but as with all Cephalotus clone characteristics it is dependant on conditions. In this case, the 'Hummer's Giant' is growing on a windowsill that doesn't get much daylength this time of year, whereas the "Big Boy" was under 13 hours of artificial lighting. There is said to be a trade-off with Cephalotus between colouration and size.
A forum member asked for this, so I merely obliged. I clearly stated in the first post 'Ignore the colouration, as they are grown in different lighting conditions...'Any comparison of different clones grown under different conditions is virtually meaningless.