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Results for
"White flowers"
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Sweet William
Fully double mix of clusters of large, colourful flowers on long strong stems. Each flower head is made up of many upward facing, individual flowers in all shades of pink and white. Grow in a mixed border in full sun for best results. All Sweet Williams are extremely easy to grow and very prolific giving you lots of flowers for not much time, money or effort. Ideal as a cut flower for the home or for weddings bouquets and other special events.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: DIANTHUS DANCING GEISHA
This superb and extremely unusual form of pink has two distinctive features. The petals, which come in shades from deepest red, palest pink, and even white, are deeply and delicately slashed into countless thousands of thin wavy fronds, producing an incredible effect when the clump is in full flower. But the most overwhelming and instantly noticeable aspect is the perfume. Very few of this famous family can compete with the constant production of sweet scent over a long season of bloom. Produces very few good seeds. Seeds collected produce multiple flower colours.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Fragrant Pink, wild Pink
Although this pink generally has a sprawling habit this is more than made up for by the powerful perfume produced by the masses of pure white flowers which bear finely-toothed petals.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Glacier Pink
Fragrant, white-throated, pink flowers on very short stems, open on compact cushions of narrow green leaves. Growing at up to 10,000 feet in the Alps this rare and tiny plant is perfect for rockery, scree or pot in the alpine house.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
Arching 12” stems hold spicy-sweet, fragrant blooms in a mix of rose, pink & white well above the blue-grey foliage from June until October. These heirloom single and semi-double pinks, which are often difficult to find, and are ideal for cutting, may be cut back after blooming for a second flush of flowers in late summer.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Russian Dianthus
Loose mats of blue-grey leaves, which are most decorative on their own, in summer erupt into a mass of short-stemmed, deeply-fringed, white ‘single carnation’ flowers, all with the most overwhelming, deep perfume. These gems come from the mountains of the Ukraine and Kazakhstan.
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Family: Rutaceae
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Common name: Burning bush, Dittany
Spires of white, lily-like flowers, scented with lemon are adorned on flower spikes, with divided green leaves. The seeds develop into star-shaped pods, which can also be used for flower arranging. Prefers full sun to partial shade and is a stunning addition to garden borders. A plant to be handled carefully, as skin irritant in sunlight.
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Family: Rutaceae
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Common name: Burning Bush, Dittany, Fraxinella, Gas Plant
This form of the normal attractive hardy perennial bears the palest pink to white flowers, and produces a scent of lemon peel when gently rubbed, Indeed the volatile oil can be ignited on a hot day leaving the plant uninjured! R.H.S. 'AGM' Award Winner.
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Family: Iridaceae
A rare, smallish species from the African mountains displaying ivory white pendulous flowers which, uniquely, open from pale sulphur yellow buds, a new colour-break in this genus. This choice plant will grow best in well-drained rich soil in a sheltered spot.
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Family: Iridaceae
Arching stems carry pendulous bunches of bell-like flowers in all shades of pink shading down to white. A very generous bag to grow a large number of these most desirable plants. You can even simply scatter them where required but be careful of the seedlings as they can resemble grass!
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Family: Iridaceae
This late flowering (August) alpine Dierama is one of the most stunning of this genus. On arching stems, the starkly-contrasting white bracts show off the pendulous deepest wine red flowers to perfection. The true species is rarely offered.
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Family: Iridaceae
This beautiful colour-break in Dieramas produces large, flared milky white bells over a long period in early and mid summer, with clumps improving over the years. Seedlings may also produce the odd bicolor or palest pink-flowered plant but these can be easily separated whilst still quite young.
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Family: Scrophulariaceae
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Common name: hairy foxglove, Digitalis lanata subsp. ciliata
Digitalis ciliata, commonly known as Hairy Foxglove, is a hardy perennial species known for its striking, tubular flowers with soft, hairy textures. The flowers are creamy yellow to pale white with purple-brown veining, adding a subtle yet exotic flair to garden borders or naturalized landscapes. The plant forms a basal rosette of lance-shaped leaves, with flowering spikes rising gracefully to create vertical interest. This foxglove species is particularly noted for its ability to thrive in dry, rocky soils, making it a great choice for xeriscaping or low-maintenance gardens. It is highly attr
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Family: Scrophulariaceae
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Common name: Foxglove
This is a spectacular towering form of this excellent perennial foxglove. Tall slender spikes in close groups bear many distinctive pale orange-brown flowers each with a protruding white lip. Completely hardy and totally perennial.
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Family: Scrophulariaceae
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Common name: Woolly Foxglove, Grecian Foxglove
This unusual small foxglove produces many compact stems tightly packed with delicately veined and netted, reddish-brown tubular flowers with long pronounced white lips. This plant derives its name from the fact that the flower buds are covered with fine silky hairs.
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