Your cart is currently empty
Named for the folks that found this red-hued spurge, 'Miner's Merlot' euphorbia boasts year-round foliage with chartreuse flower bracts in late spring to summer.
Beautiful dark purple, year-round foliage contrasts nicely with lavender flower spikes all summer. Hummingbirds and bees love it!
Burgundy stems contrast nicely with small, glossy green leaves year-round, and purple flower spikes in the summer.
This heather will brighten up the darkest days of late winter into early spring with its profuse magenta blooms.
For those who love the look of smokebushes but lack the space, consider this dwarf variety, half the size of its parent plant but with all the color!
These sunflower-like blooms seem to pop against the signature dark foliage. Treated as an annual in the Pacific NW.
Give this Ninebark plenty of sun for the deepest, darkest foliage color. Blush pink flower clusters pop against such a dramatic backdrop.
Wider than it is tall, consider using this burgundy-tinged evergreen as a ground cover. Pink flower spikes will attract the bees in summer.
Dark maroon to red blades grow up to 4 feet tall. If that isn't cool enough, just wait until the dark red plumes emerge.
A veritable carnival of colors with distinctive veins make this heuchera a year-round show-off in hanging baskets or in the garden.
This one changes throughout the year, bright red in the spring, deeper red in summer, then back to bright during dark fall/winter days.
This sedum almost doesn't look real, but 'Dream Dazzler' is in fact a late-summer blooming perennial, tough enough to come back in the spring.
Perfect for pink lovers, this evergreen shrub will be covered with hot pink blooms in the spring and into the summer.
Less "rainbow" and more "sunrise," this New Zealand Flax sports salmon to yellow hued leaves edged in green and bronze.
Cream, green, and pinkish purple foliage - who needs flowers when you've got such gorgeous leaves on purple stems?
New red growth tops deep green, year-round foliage. Profuse chartreuse yellow flower clusters announce the arrival of spring.
Crimson foliage in the spring darkens to maroon as the leaves age, then take on purple tones as the weather cools.
Unusual reddish bronze, fine-bladed foliage makes a distinctive addition to planters or sunny gardens and no, it's not dead.
Make these sword-like, deep red to burgundy leaves the focal point of your large summer baskets or container planters.
This lance-leafed Loosestrife is in the same family as Creeping Jenny, but totally unlike that popular trailer for all the right reasons.
Ninebark is so named for its exfoliating bark, just one characteristic of this attractive, dark-leafed shrub.
This palm-like evergreen thrives in the sun but looks its best when watered regularly. Growing this in a container makes it easy to shelter in extreme cold.
Hot pink and green in the fall and winter, morphing to lighter shades of pink, cream, green, and gold as the weather warms up.
Unusual reddish bronze, fine-bladed foliage makes a distinctive addition to planters or sunny gardens and no, it's not dead.