These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (2024)

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (1)

Got shade? Sun-loving plants are big and flashy, but that doesn't mean the shady spots in your garden and backyard can't look great, too.

Many long-lived perennials love the shade! From flowers to ferns, shade perennials can be just as stunning as sun lovers.

What Plants Grow Well In Shade?

Many different types of plants grow well in shade, including flowering plants and those grown mainly for their colorful foliage. The most important thing to remember is to choose the right plant for the right place. Shade lovers will not do well in full sun, for instance. Don't try to cheat. Nature doesn't work that way!

Also, make sure a perennial you fall in love with can survive winters in your USDA hardiness zone. (Find your zone here.)Be aware that the hardiness zones were recently updated.

How Many Hours of Sun Is Considered Part Shade?

There are several terms you're likely to find on plant tags: Full sun, part sun, part shade, and full shade. Full shade means a spot never gets direct sunlight, or only very short amount of mild, morning sunshine. Part shade means about 4 hours of sun—but mostly morning sun, not blazing-hot afternoon sun.

Part sun mean 4 to 6 hours of sun per day, including some afternoon sun. And full sun means 6 or more hours of sunlight.

So: before selecting plants for an area, pay attention to how much shade it receives. Watch the area for a few days, checking the spot at different times of day to figure out when it's getting direct sunlight, and when it's not. Then choose the plants you want to place there accordingly.

Finally, make sure to give your plant a good start in life by watering well for the first season (or two) after planting so that it can establish sturdy roots. Strong roots mean a strong plant that will thrives for years with little help from you!

More great gardening ideas:

  • 30 Best Perennial Plants For Year After Year of Beauty
  • 30 Best Flowering Vines to Add Vertical Color
  • 13 Best Privacy Trees for Your Back Yard

Bergenia

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (2)

Also known by the irresistible name of pigsqueak, this part-shade perennial blooms in early spring. Trim it up as a handsome foliage plant after the blooms fade.

Varieties to try: Miss Piggy, Peppermint Patty

Related: The Best Spring Bulbs for Your Garden

Ligularia

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (3)

Sometimes called "leopard plant," Ligularia is an excellent choice for any shade garden—and not just because deer don't enjoy eating it.

"One of the other nice things about this plant is its striking, purplish-red leaves," adds Daryl Beyers, author of The New Gardener's Handbook. "There's another variety that features yellow, daisy-looking flowers, and yet another called 'The Rocket' that boasts spikier blooms."

Varieties to try: Desdemona, Britt-Marie Crawford, The Rocket

Related: 26 Best Shade Annuals for Bare Spots In Your Garden

Hosta

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (4)

Hosta is a go-to plant for shady areas. Primarily a foliage plant, the broad-leafed beauty can actually be very small or very large.

"Sum and Substance is a variety that gets huge—about five feet across," says Beyers. "Meanwhile, Mouse Ears is really, really tiny." But heads up: Avoid this plant if deer browse your yard frequently.

Varieties to try: Sum and Substance, Mouse Ears, Shadowland Empress Wu, Shadowland Autumn Frost

Learn More: How to Care for Hostas

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Spiderwort

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (5)

Spiderwort or tradescantia is a part shade—not deep shade—plant. It features an intricate flower and can grow anywhere from a foot-and-a-half to two feet tall.

"The variety Sweet Kate has unique, chartreuse-colored leaves," says Beyers.

Varieties to try: Sweet Kate, Concord Grape, Webmaster

Related: The 20 Best Patio Plants for a Lush Outdoor Space

Woodland Stonecrop

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (6)

While some sedums can tolerate a bit of shade, one that thrives in it is Sedum ternatum, or woodland stonecrop.

Native to the U.S., this low-growing plant does well in moist, rocky soil and produces tiny white flowers. One editor grows it in a shady terrace bed along with a dwarf Japanese maple and hostas.

Learn More: How to Grow Autumn Joy Sedum

Viola

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (7)

These spring bloomers tolerate some sun, but they prefer part to full shade, especially in the heat of summer. Some types are fragrant, too. If you like to cook, they're also edible!

Varieties to try: Penny Purple Picotee, Johnny Jump-Up

Related: 25 Fragrant Plants You Need In Your Garden

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Astilbe

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (8)

Lacey, toothed leaves and feathery plumes of pink, white, red, or purple flowers bloom in profusion in early to midsummer. A little morning sun helps them bloom better.

Varieties to try: Dark Side of the Moon, Milk and Honey

Related: 38 Deer-Resistant Plants Bambi Won't Go Near

Lamium

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (9)

Lamium has silvery, variegated foliage and yellow, pink, white or or purple blooms. It's super-easy to grow and needs almost no care once established.

Varieties to try: Pink Chablis, Purple Chablis

Related: 30 Best Pink Flowers for An Enchanting Garden

Heuchera

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (10)

Grown primarily for its colorful ruffled foliage, this perennial's mounding habit shoots up small flower spikes in spring to mid-summer, which hummingbirds love!

Some varieties tolerate full sun, but many prefer shade.

Varieties to try: Dolce Appletini, Primo Pistachio

Related: 21 Flowers That Hummingbirds Adore

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Epimedium

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (11)

These little plants are also known as fairy wings or bishop’s cap due to the adorable shape of their flowers, which appear in early spring.

They don’t like foot traffic, so plant them where they won’t be stepped on. They are one of the few ground cover plants that does fairly well in dry shade.

Varieties to try: Pink Champagne, Lilafee

Ferns

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (12)

Frothy-looking ferns are sturdier than they appear, popping up again after even the toughest winters. They prefer moist ground but are fairly drought-tolerant once established.

Varieties to try: Autumn, Japanese Painted

Hellebore

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (13)

These cold-tolerant plants produce unusual, long-lasting blooms in late winter or very early spring. Also known as Lenten rose because they bloom around the time of Lent, the foliage is evergreen.

Varieties to try: Wedding Party Confetti Cake, Wedding Party Childhood Sweetheart, Honeymoon Irish Luck

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Foamflower

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (14)

Lobed foliage with red or purple veins make this plant unique. Also known as tiarella, this plant boasts floaty little flowers that resemble foam on long stems in late spring to early summer.

Varieties to try: Cutting Edge, Jade Peaco*ck

Toad Lily

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (15)

The intricate flowers (spotted like a toad!) are the reason to grow these little gems. They bloom mid-to-late summer to fall in a variety of spotted colors ranging from white to lavender.

Varieties to try: Purple Beauty, Raspberry Mousse

Bletilla

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (16)

This exotic-looking flower, also known as ground orchid, appears in early spring in white, purple, and various shades of pink. Its blooms often last up to six weeks.

It’s an unusual landscape plant for warmer climates, or it can be overwintered indoors in containers.

Varieties to try: White Pearl, Kate

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Siberian Bugloss

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (17)

This perennial with a funny name is grown for its striking foliage and graceful sprays of long-lasting, tiny blue flowers, which appear in spring. Also known as brunnera, it’s a hardy, low-maintenance plant.

Varieties to try: Jack Frost, Queen of Hearts

Corydalis

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (18)

Tubular lightly-scented spring flowers hang above finely-cut foliage. The plant is ideal for warm climates. Foliage may die back in summer and sprout again in fall.

Varieties to try: Purple Bird, Canary Feathers

Bleeding Heart

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (19)

It's easy to see how this old-fashioned favorite gets its name. Perhaps unsurprisingly, they're often ascribes special meaning on Valentine's Day.

Sprays of late spring to early summer flowers come in a variety of colors ranging from deep red to pink with lime-green to dark green foliage.

Varieties to try: White Diamonds, Pink Diamonds

Advertisem*nt - Continue Reading Below

Lungwort

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (20)

This pretty ground cover blooms in early to late spring with small bell-shaped flowers and spotted foliage.

It looks best planted en masse. The un-glamorous name comes from its historic usage to treat lung ailments!

Varieties to try: Spot On, Pink-a-Blue

Related: 25 Best Ground Covers for Backyard Bald Spots

Foxglove

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (21)

Although this perennial blooms well in full sun, it tolerates part shade, especially in hot climates. The tall spiked flowers are a standard in cottage gardens and cutting gardens.

Varieties to try: Polkadot Princess, Foxy

Related: Here's How to Grow An At-Home Cutting Garden

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (22)

Arricca Elin SanSone

Contributing Writer

Arricca Elin SanSone is a freelance writer, editor, and digital content developer. She specializes in lifestyle and interior design content with a focus on gardening. Arricca earned dual bachelor’s degrees summa cum laude in English and classics from Hiram College, as well as an MBA cum laude from Georgia Southern University. Before writing full-time, Arricca studied in Rome, traveled in Europe, and taught school in Asia. With over a decade of experience, Arricca has pitched, researched, and crafted fresh story ideas and content to appeal to national audiences. She has written thousands of articles for print and digital publications such as Country Living, Good Housekeeping, Prevention, House Beautiful, and more. She’s passionate about gardening, baking, reading, and spending time with the people and dogs she loves.

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (23)

Expert consulted:Daryl Beyers

Daryl Beyers is gardening certificate program coordinator at the New York Botanical Garden, where he helps shape the education department’s curriculum, and teaches the popular Fundamentals of Gardening course. He is also the author of The New Gardener's Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Grow a Beautiful and Bountiful Garden. He has had more than twenty-five years of professional landscaping experience, specializing in residential garden design and development.

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden (2024)

FAQs

These Shade-Lovers Add Color and Beauty to Your Garden? ›

Select annuals to create color in shady spots. Annuals are a perfect addition to a shade garden, as they bloom all summer long. Top varieties include impatiens, balsam, torenia, browallia, coleus, and iresine. Mix and match the colors of your plants for a dynamic look.

How to add color to shade garden? ›

Select annuals to create color in shady spots. Annuals are a perfect addition to a shade garden, as they bloom all summer long. Top varieties include impatiens, balsam, torenia, browallia, coleus, and iresine. Mix and match the colors of your plants for a dynamic look.

What is the best color for garden shade? ›

White shade cloth is best for flower, fruit, and warm region growers because it creates a cooler temperature for the plants. Black shade cloth absorbs heat, creating a warm environment for heat-loving plants like tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and strawberries. It is perfect for cool-region growers.

What is the best color combination for a garden? ›

In color-based combinations, contrast can come from using different hues, especially complementary colors, such as blue and orange, or yellow and purple. You might also consider a light-and-dark pairing — burgundy with chartreuse, for example, or bright silver with black — for a high-impact contrast.

What do you add to a color to shade it? ›

Shade is a hue or mixture of pure colors to which only black is added. It contains no white or gray. Shade darkens the color, but the hue remains the same. When mixing a shade, begin with the color itself then add black one drop at a time.

How do I get more shade in my garden? ›

Ways to make shade in your garden
  1. 1 – Awnings. The gold standard of outdoor shading, you can't beat an awning. ...
  2. 2 – Shade sails. ...
  3. 3 – Pergolas and climbing plants. ...
  4. 4 – Garden screening. ...
  5. 5 – Trees. ...
  6. 6 – Gazebos and marquees. ...
  7. 7 – Parasols. ...
  8. Outdoor dining.
May 14, 2018

How do you color in shade? ›

Hold your pencil sideways so the largest part of the tip touches the paper. This position allows you to layer the color until you reach your desired shade. Apply pressure on the tip of your pencil to make fine details, outline parts of your drawing, or shade in dark colors.

References

Top Articles
9 Best Free Kindle Books: 03-25-18
Diana Hyland Died Leaving behind Son - John Travolta Lost a Battle over Him to Addicted Dad
Spasa Parish
Rentals for rent in Maastricht
159R Bus Schedule Pdf
Sallisaw Bin Store
Black Adam Showtimes Near Maya Cinemas Delano
Espn Transfer Portal Basketball
Pollen Levels Richmond
11 Best Sites Like The Chive For Funny Pictures and Memes
Things to do in Wichita Falls on weekends 12-15 September
Craigslist Pets Huntsville Alabama
Paulette Goddard | American Actress, Modern Times, Charlie Chaplin
What's the Difference Between Halal and Haram Meat & Food?
R/Skinwalker
Rugged Gentleman Barber Shop Martinsburg Wv
Jennifer Lenzini Leaving Ktiv
Justified - Streams, Episodenguide und News zur Serie
Epay. Medstarhealth.org
Olde Kegg Bar & Grill Portage Menu
Cubilabras
Half Inning In Which The Home Team Bats Crossword
Amazing Lash Bay Colony
Juego Friv Poki
Dirt Devil Ud70181 Parts Diagram
Truist Bank Open Saturday
Water Leaks in Your Car When It Rains? Common Causes & Fixes
What’s Closing at Disney World? A Complete Guide
Experience the Convenience of Po Box 790010 St Louis Mo
Fungal Symbiote Terraria
modelo julia - PLAYBOARD
Poker News Views Gossip
Abby's Caribbean Cafe
Joanna Gaines Reveals Who Bought the 'Fixer Upper' Lake House and Her Favorite Features of the Milestone Project
Tri-State Dog Racing Results
Navy Qrs Supervisor Answers
Trade Chart Dave Richard
Lincoln Financial Field Section 110
Free Stuff Craigslist Roanoke Va
Stellaris Resolution
Wi Dept Of Regulation & Licensing
Pick N Pull Near Me [Locator Map + Guide + FAQ]
Crystal Westbrooks Nipple
Ice Hockey Dboard
Über 60 Prozent Rabatt auf E-Bikes: Aldi reduziert sämtliche Pedelecs stark im Preis - nur noch für kurze Zeit
Wie blocke ich einen Bot aus Boardman/USA - sellerforum.de
Infinity Pool Showtimes Near Maya Cinemas Bakersfield
Dermpathdiagnostics Com Pay Invoice
How To Use Price Chopper Points At Quiktrip
Maria Butina Bikini
Busted Newspaper Zapata Tx
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6235

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.