For me, any orchid that is suffering is ugly. For instance, I have two Lepanthes that had the decency to die quickly and quietly. Their tiny skeletons take up almost no space, and they don't look bad enough to take the time to pull them out of the terrarium (and they could sprout again any time - right? Right?).
On the other hand, I have some minicats that I rotted the roots off of down at the greenhouse. They've been in the midst of a slow recovery or slow death for months now. They are truly ugly.
I love big floofy catts.
I love dramatic Paphs.
For me, the aesthetic ends up being all about the balance between foliage and flowers. If the foliage is awful, the flowers had better be fantastic (Onc. Sharry Baby). On the other hand, fabulous foliage can excuse an uninteresting bloom (some of the south american terrestrials, Jewel orchids, etc)
I really like the ones with sort of a "rock garden" appeal:
Den. cuthbertsonii
Sophronitis species
Lepanthes calodictyon
Trisetella species
Phal. Dawn Treader (Be Glad line breeding)
Paph. Faire-Maude types
Complex white paphs
Complex x species type Paphs - bred for floriferousness (gratrixianum, henryanum, fairrieanum, barbigerum or insigne crossed with complex types especially)
Kefersteinia species
Dryadella species
Cym. Golden Elf 'Sundust'
Pterostylis species
Corybas species
These can all be wonderful IF they are grown well. If they are grown poorly or if they are young plants, they can all be ugly...
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