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Edibility
Inedible
Lookalike Danger
1 / 5
Habitat
🪵 Dead hardwood
Season
Year-round🌱 Now
"Scratch the pale underside and it stays marked forever. Artists paint on fresh ones. Medicinal use studied."
This species is found with or partners with the following hosts. Ectomycorrhizal hosts (green border) form a root-level partnership; ericoid / arbutoid shrubs (purple border) share the same mycorrhizal networks.

Fallen logs, stumps, and dying hardwood — substrate for oyster, turkey-tail, dryad’s saddle, and most hardwood saprobes.

Generic hardwood habitat — oak, maple, beech, birch, etc. Shown when the species is reported from hardwoods generally.
Woody perennial shelf fungus on hardwood. White underside bruises instantly brown when scratched — artists etch portraits and landscapes on the living underside and dry the conk to preserve. Also used medicinally as tea.
Base and wounds of living hardwoods (maple, oak, beech) across temperate North America and Europe. Years-long perennial — same conk grows bigger yearly.
Min Soil Temp
55°F
Moisture Need
rain 0.5in 7d
Drought Tolerance
moderate
Elevation Range
0–6,684 ft
Varnished surface (shiny). Artist's conk is dull brown.
Gray-black, also hoof-shaped. Does not bruise brown.
Dead hardwood
Photograph it and log your observation on iNaturalist. The community can help confirm your ID — always get confirmation before eating.