120 products found
Smaller in habit than regular Zebra Grass but features the same striking color contrast in the foliage and silvery plumes.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A tall, graceful, clumping grass with silvery-green leaves and white fan-shaped plumes in the fall.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A fine-textured dwarf grass with red fan-shaped plumes in August.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Fantastic striped foliage of dark green and creamy gold form a dramatic arching habit. Makes a superb groundcover plant for moist, shady areas.
Photos courtesy Westwood Gardens.
Creamy white, marginal variegation on thick, leathery green leaves. Spreads to form a thick, grassy carpet.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Blue Zinger is an upright cultivar featuring attractive, grass-like, blue-green foliage. It is more clump-forming than species plants.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A rugged, cold hardy native grass that features blue-green foliage and striking, flag-like summer flowers. Great in low maintenance landscapes, rock gardens, and for erosion control.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A native, drought-tolerant perennial grass that produces curiously-shaped seed heads. Color highlights on foliage range from green to blue-green to silvery-blue in summer, and red, orange, and purple in fall.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Brilliant butter-yellow variegated foliage makes this grass good as an accent, a mass planting, or for shallow ponds.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Grown for the harvest of their edible, colorful leaves, ornamental kale and cabbage thrive in cooler spring or autumn temperatures to yield the best combinations of white, cream, pink, red, and/or purple.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Popular in autumn, mums are best grown in full sun with humus-like soil. Great as a replacement for summer annuals, or even to complement them. For the best blooms and height, feed several times throughout growing season and pinch stems back as necessary (preferably Memorial Day to Independence Day).
Photos cortesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Grown in St Louis as cool weather annual specimens, pansies are sweet-scented flowers that can last all year when grown in humus-like soil during early autumn.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.