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shade plants

Embrace the Shade: A Guide to Shade-Loving Plants

Many gardeners believe that shady spots limit their plant choices, but the truth is, mature trees and shady areas offer a canvas for vibrant and diverse plant life. With the right selections, you can transform a dim corner into a lush and inviting garden. Here’s a guide to help you make the most of your shaded spaces, whether they receive full shade, filtered shade, or afternoon shade.


Creating a Stunning Shade Garden

Tip: When designing a shade bed, incorporate evergreen plants to provide a framework or anchor that remains attractive year-round. Combine these with a variety of leaf textures, colors, and heights. Adding annuals and perennials will ensure your shade garden is both beautiful and interesting throughout the seasons.


Shade-Loving Plants to Consider

For Full Shade or Filtered Shade:

  • Agapanthus (Afternoon Shade)
  • Ajuga
  • Aralia
  • Ardesia
  • Asparagus Fern
  • Aspidistra (Cast Iron Plant)
  • Astilbe
  • Aucuba
  • Azalea (Morning Sun)
  • Barberry - Golden
  • Begonia (Green & Bronze Leaf, Dragon Wing, Baby Dragon Wing, Big)
  • Bell Flower (Campanula)
  • Bee Balm / Monarda
  • Bleeding Heart
  • Boxwood
  • Camellia
  • Caladium
  • Cardinal Flower
  • Chinese Fringe Flower (Morning Sun)
  • Coleus
  • Columbine
  • Coral Bells (Heuchera)
  • Elephant Ears
  • Euphorbia, Little Jo / Bonfire
  • Euonymus Coloratus (Purple Winter Creeper)
  • Fallopia
  • Ferns
  • Flax Lilly (Dianella)
  • Fothergilla “Mount Airy”
  • Gardenias
  • Grasses / Ornamental

Tip: Adding garden structures like benches, arbors, obelisks, beautiful containers, or statuary can add another layer of visual interest to any garden or bed.

For Partial Shade or Afternoon Shade:

  • Hollies (Dwarf Burford, Carissa, Chinese, Dwarf Yaupon, Nelly R. Stevens, Weeping Yaupon)
  • Honeysuckle (Lemon Beauty)
  • Hosta
  • Houttuynia
  • Heuchera (Beautiful with Hostas)
  • Hydrangea (Morning Sun)
  • Hypericum (St. John’s Wort) (Afternoon Shade)
  • Impatiens
  • Itea
  • Ivy (English, Variegated)
  • Lamium (White Nancy, Red Nancy, Anne Greenway)
  • Lenten Rose / Hellebores
  • Liriope (Green, Variegated)
  • Lobelia
  • Lorapetulum
  • Lungwort (Pulmonaria)
  • Lysmachia
  • Mahonia
  • Mazus
  • Mondo Grass
  • Nandinas
  • Oxalis
  • Pachysandra
  • Penstemon
  • Pink Splash
  • Pittosporum (Variegated, Wheelers Dwarf)
  • Podocarpus
  • Potentilla
  • Privet (Green Variegated)
  • Ruellia (Blue, Pink, White)
  • Sweet Spire, Henry’s Garnet
  • Spirea
  • Torenia
  • Turk’s Cap
  • Turtle Head
  • Veronica (Waterperry Blue)
  • Verbascum
  • Viburnum
  • Vinca (Ground Cover)
  • Violets
  • Weigela (Afternoon Shade)
  • Yews (Densiformus)

Tip: Add Height: Create layers in your garden to keep it interesting. Use tall planters, pillars, or grow understory shade-tolerant trees and shrubs of varying heights.

Shade-Loving Perennials

Spring Bloomers:

  • Columbine (Tx. Gold)
  • Candytuft
  • Coral Bells
  • Flax
  • Lamium
  • Lenten Rose (Hellebores)
  • Nana Coreopsis
  • Oxalis
  • Spiderwort (Late Spring)
  • Violets

Summer Bloomers:

  • Cardinal Flower
  • Erysimum, Wallflower (Bowles Mauve)
  • Lungwort (Pulmonaria)
  • Bee Balm (Monarda)
  • Lysmachia
  • Lythrum
  • Ruellia (Blue, Pink, White)
  • Turk’s Cap
  • Penstemon
  • Physostegia (Miss Manner)
  • Potentilla (Miss Wilmott)
  • Heuchera
  • Verbascum
  • Veronica

Foliage for Shade:

  • Elephant Ears (Annual)
  • Liriope (Variegated or Green)
  • Caladiums (Annual)
  • Ivy
  • Ajuga
  • Aspidistra / Cast Iron Plant
  • Ferns
  • Sedges
  • Ardisia
  • Heuchera
  • Euphorbia (Little Jo or Bonfire)
  • Hosta

Tip: Disease and pests can be a concern in shady gardens. Avoid overwatering, as excess moisture can lead to fungal diseases. Slugs and snails may also be problematic; consider using slug and snail baits or pecan shell mulch to deter them.

With the right plant choices and a bit of creativity, your shaded garden can become a stunning and serene oasis. Happy gardening!