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Results for
"White flowers"
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Family: Asteraceae, Compositae
This dramatic specimen plant features creamy-white and green variegated leaves, the new spring growth being tinged pink. Fragrant cream and pale-pink, fluffy, ageratum-like flowers, open in large sprays in late summer. This plant comes relatively true from seed but very few good seeds are produced.
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Family: Euphorbiaceae
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Common name: Mountain Spurge, Snow On The Mountain, Euphorbia variegata
This stunning annual with a bushy growth habit produces showy clusters of small, pale green and white blossoms which make awesome cut flowers whilst the foliage has spectacular white margins. It is easily propagated from seeds and thrives best in well-drained soil. It is low maintenance and loves heat and humidity as well as being drought tolerant.
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Family: Euphorbiaceae
An extremely rare shrub now found only in the Azores Islands where it is almost extinct. This extremely attractive plant has distinctively white-veined, leathery green leaves and large yellow flower heads which are strongly honey-scented in spring and summer.
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Family: Rosaceae
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Common name: Pearl bush
The pure white flowers of this early summer flowering shrub give rise to the name - The Bride - or the Pearl Bush, as the opening flower buds have an astonishing resemblance to strings of pearls wrapped around the branches. In April and May it can produce an unforgettable cascading waterfall of sweetly perfumed ivory-white flowers.
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Family: Araliaceae
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Common name: Japanese Aralia, Japanese Fatsia, Aralia japonica, Aralia sieboldii
A tropical-looking, frost-hardy evergreen shrub with large, leathery, brightly-polished leaves. Panicles of white flowers appear late in the year and much later still, in March and April, come the large clusters of jet-back berries.
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Family: Rosaceae
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Common name: Meadowsweet
"Meadowsweet" is one of the most attractive spring and summer flowers, bearing white fluffy sprays of flowers on strong stems which bear jagged-edged, corrugated leaves. Thriving in both garden soil and boggy waterside conditions, the flowers and leaves, if bruised, have a pleasant and quite pronounced 'antiseptic' fragrance, very much like "Savlon" cream.
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Family: Rosaceae
The golden-leaved form of the beautiful " Meadowsweet" is an asset for any garden. Sprays of attractive, fluffy white flowers arise above stems clad in finely divided, canary-yellow leaves. The entire plant, even the leaves when crushed, has a deliciously fragrant, almost antiseptic perfume.
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Family: Saxifragaceae
"Bridal wreath". An appropriate name for this rarely grown stately saxifrage relative from Chile. Long lasting red spotted white flowers on long graceful wands above clumps of fleshy deeply lobed leaves.
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New
Family: Francoaceae
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Common name: Bridal Wreath, White Francoa
Francoa sonchifolia 'Alba', commonly known as Bridal Wreath or White Francoa, is an elegant perennial that adds grace and charm to garden borders, cottage gardens, and shaded areas. This clump-forming plant features rosettes of attractive, scalloped green leaves that serve as a lush backdrop to its tall, slender spikes of pure white flowers. Blooming in mid to late summer, the delicate, star-like flowers attract pollinators such as bees and butterflies, making this plant both ornamental and ecologically valuable.
This perennial thrives in full sun to partial shade and prefers well-drained,
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Family: Liliaceae
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Common name: SNAKES HEAD FRITILLARY, LEPER LILY, CHECKERED DAFFODIL
The snake’s head fritillary is one of the most exquisite jewels in the treasure house of British wild flowers with a long list of common names which also include, Checkered Daffodil, Chess Flower, Frog-cup, Leper lily and Guinea-hen Flower. The bell shaped flowers are unmistakeable for their nodding heads, sometimes of pure white, or more frequently marked with a delicate chequerboard pattern in shades of purple. This rare British wild flower is now protected in its native meadows, but will always attract attention in a woodland garden, rockery, or naturalised in grass where they look magical.
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Family: LILIACEAE
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Common name: WHITE SNAKE'S HEAD FRITILLARY, LEPER LILY
The white form of this rare British native is rarely found in the wild. It flowers from March to May growing to between 15 and 40 cm in height. In the wild it is commonly found growing in grasslands in damp soils and river meadows and can be found at altitudes up to 800 metres, although it takes readily to garden culture where it makes a superb border plant or will even naturalise in long grass.
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Family: Liliaceae
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Common name: snake’s head fritillary
The snake’s head fritillary is one of the most exquisite jewels in the treasure house of British wild flowers with a long list of common names which also include, Checkered Daffodil, Chess Flower, Frog-cup, Leper lily and Guinea-hen Flower. The nodding bell shaped flowers are unmistakeable for their nodding heads, sometimes of pure white, or more frequently marked with a delicate chequerboard pattern in shades of purple. This rare British wild flower is now protected in its native meadows, but will always attract attention in a woodland garden, rockery, or naturalised in grass where they look
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Family: Onagraceae
An absolutely stunning, showy species, native to southern Peru, Bolivia and northern Argentina, producing exotic, hanging clusters of 10 centimetre flowers in a stunning combination of pure white and fluorescent red. The long trumpet-shaped blooms open progressively down the cluster for several months, followed, quite incredibly, by tasty green fruits! This is an extremely valuable plant that can either be grown in a large pot or be centre-stage in the garden. Freshly picked seeds are very rarely offered for sale.
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Family: Onagraceae
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Common name: Fuchsia boliviana 'alba'
We are offering the even rarer form of this elusive flower which displays incredible bi-coloured flowers with an ivory white tube and fluorescent scarlet petals. These pendent blooms, borne in late summer and autumn, are displayed in large drooping corymbs up to 20 cm long. This hard-to-find variety from the Andes mountains, which in the right climate can become an impressive shrub, sends down super-long clusters of trumpet-shaped blooms which open progressively down the cluster over several months. Hardy to about -4 °C for short periods, it is best in a sheltered spot or a large pot indoors.
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Family: Asteraceae
One of the most attractive winter rosettes of any plant. Strikingly variegated 'soft' thistle leaves sprout forth a multitude of purple summer flowers on the standard plant which gently self-seeds in a hot year. This is the incredible albino version of the lovely purple form. Discovered by Dorian Roxburgh on her parent's farm in South West Spain and brought back to England. Sprays of fragrant green-eyed white flowers in long succession all summer. Fertile seeds are few and must be collected individually by hand.
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