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Downy gray- white foliage provides the perfect backdrop for cool weather bloomers or evergreens in fall/winter baskets.
Named Evening Sun because the bright yellow flowers open in the late afternoon and stay open all night, attracting moths and butterflies.
An unusual dwarf ornamental onion with wide, blue-green strap-like foliage. A large creamy white globe of star-shaped flowers blooms in late spring to summer.
Blue-toned grass-like foliage may be a good alternative to true grasses, and pale blue springtime flowers are a bonus.
This stonecrop forms a tight mass of plump rosettes that are multi-colored for most of the year, with silvery-gray leaves accented with red tones.
Want a brilliant splash of red in containers or in sunny borders? 'Fire Star' dianthus should do nicely, thank you very much!
A bit smaller than other varieties of Euphorbia, 'Glacier Blue' provides year-round interest in container planters and the garden.
An unusual ground cover with swirly flat, gray-green foliage and foot-tall ball-shaped lavender-pink summer flowers.
Dramatic black stems, silvery blue leaves, purple flowers -a magical combination for year-round interest in the yard or containers.
Silvery green foliage provides a wonderful contrast to the soft pink, pineapple-shaped flower spikes that bloom late spring into summer.
Arching silver, sword-like leaves provide a unique, striking focus in container planters or hanging baskets - absolutely stunning.
New and rare plant pick, definitely will catch one's eye with its thick fleshy, prehistoric looking leaves draping like "falling waters" over a pot.
Long stalked purple flowers rise above silvery-gray leaves all summer. Fragrant, flavorful, and a year-round garden favorite.
Dusty blue year-round foliage, fragrant summer blooms, tough enough to thrive on dry hillsides or in other sometimes neglected spots.
A perfect summer flower for fans of true blue, with white-eyed, tightly clustered flowers on three to four foot stems.
Plant it once then (almost) forget it. Stonecrops do well with benign neglect once established, and they keep on showing off year after year.
Lavenders are known for their heat tolerance, but this Spanish lavender is also more tolerant of cold and wet conditions - perfect for the Pacific NW!
Yes, the exclamation mark is literally part of this variety's name, and given all its outstanding properties, it is indeed sensational.
Blue-gray foliage is often covered by the hot pink flower clusters in late summer to early fall, and they allegedly smell like grape soda!
Long stalks of violet blue flowers rise high above a dense mound of silvery green, fragrant narrow leaves for most of the summer.
This stonecrop's thick fleshy leaves change color throughout the seasons, from green and purple, to burgundy tones when blooms appear.
A bit more forgiving of clay soil than most sedums, it prefers well-draining soil, especially during the winter months.
A truly eye-catching stonecrop that forms silvery blue to purple rosettes. Well suited to the Pacific NW, but well-draining soil is a must.
This spruce announces spring with a burst of creamy white new growth that gradually darkens to the blue of older foliage.