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Bright yellow and honey colored foliage will add a pop of color to shade gardens as well as sunnier spots in the garden.
Elephant's Ears, Pig Squeak, Winterglut, or Heart-leaved Bergenia - whatever name you call it, it's a great multi-purpose shade plant.
Not a fan of sage in food? Then consider growing this as an ornamental - tough, low-maintenance, and gorgeous!
This is truly a swoon-worthy hibiscus with pink blooms as big as one's face and dark foliage providing a beautiful backdrop.
Chocolate to almost black sword-like leaves adds vertical interest and a bit of drama to the sunny garden.
Not-so-tall but dark and handsome! A dramatic complement to silvery blue foliage or more colorful evergreens and perennials.
This one changes throughout the year, bright red in the spring, deeper red in summer, then back to bright during dark fall/winter days.
Not-so-tall but dark and handsome! A dramatic complement to silvery blue foliage or more colorful evergreens and perennials.
Winter may seem like an odd time to be talking about Pina Coladas, but this one takes on some of its best colors in the colder weather.
Cherry-pink edges add another dimension to burgundy colored leaves that eventually grow 4 to 6 feet tall and wide.
Orange is rare in the garden but this barberry delivers with its coral-orange foliage in the spring, morphing to brilliant red/orange in the fall.
Common Name: Icicle Hens & ChicksMature Size: 4 in. tall and 12 in. wide Growth Rate: Medium Cold Hardiness: -40° F Additional Characteristics: Evergreen Structure: Groundcover Flowers: Pink flowers in summer Container Size: 4in. x 4in.
Visitors to the nursery won't have any problem finding this oxalis on the shade tables with its almost neon green, yellow, orange, and pink shamrock foliage.
Not really red, but a knock-your-socks-off magenta surrounded by deeply serrated, dark bronzy green leaves.
Got a boggy spot in the garden where nothing seems to grow? Orange you glad we have Orange Sedge in stock?