15 Best Plants for Cool-season Color

Brighten gray, drizzly days with the West's best cool-season flowers.


Shiny dark green leaves look great all year
Shiny dark green leaves look great all year


Candytuft (Iberis)
Perennial
Candytuft plants grow 8 to 12 inches high and wide; their narrow, shiny dark green leaves look great all year.

Pure white flower clusters are carried on stems long enough to cut for bouquets. Choose 'Alexander's White' (pictured), 'Autumnale', or 'Autumn Snow; they bloom in spring and again in fall.

Plants thrive in full sun or part shade and regular water. Candytuft needs well-drained soil and should be sheared lightly after bloom to stimulate new growth.
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Adds intense color to dark corners of the garden
Adds intense color to dark corners of the garden


Cineraria

Annual
Made for the shade, florists' cineraria adds intense color to dark corners of the garden.

Cineraria grows to 2 feet high and wide with daisies ranging in color from white through pink and purplish red to blue and purple. Plants need partial or full shade along with regular water and loose, rich soil. Discard after bloom, even where perennial.

Here it's combined with asparagus fern in a 15-inch-wide glazed terra-cotta pot.
Vegetables you can grow in winter


Flowers resemble shooting stars or butterflies
Flowers resemble shooting stars or butterflies


Cyclamen

Perennial
Few blooms say winter like cyclamen. Pretty flowers in shades of white, pink, rose, and red are carried atop an attractive clump of leaves. Flowers resemble shooting stars or butterflies.

Large-flowered florists' cyclamen (pictured) is most often seen as a container-grown gift plant though they also make great bedding plants.

Smaller-flowered, hardier plants are better adapted to outdoor use, but will be fine in a container as long as it's kept out of direct sunlight. Give them part shade and regular water.


English daises make great edging plants
English daises make great edging plants


English daisy (Bellis perennis)

Perennial treated as annual
Plump, perky English daises make great edging plants. Or slip a few into your lawn for unexpected bursts of color.

Dark green leaves are 1 to 2 inches long and form rosettes to 8 inches wide. Pink, rose, red, or white flowers are borne on 3- to 6-inch stems.

Deadhead to prolong bloom. English daisy needs regular water and prefers a bit of shade in hot climates.


Heath needs excellent drainage and acidic soil
Heath needs excellent drainage and acidic soil


Erica (heath)

Perennial
Erica is grown for small, needlelike leaves that become showered in small flowers. Blooms may be bell shaped, urn shaped, or tubular.

Plants can be small and mounding, no taller than 6 inches high, or a tall upright or sprawling shrub, as high as 6 to 10 feet. Heath needs excellent drainage and acidic soil. Sandy soil amended with organic matter is ideal.

Water carefully and consistently--plants will not tolerate standing water or absolute dryness. Shear or cut off faded flower spikes, but don't cut to bare wood as new growth might not resprout.


Distinctive flowers in winter and spring
Distinctive flowers in winter and spring


Hellebores

Perennial
Plant hellebores for distinctive flowers in winter and spring. Flowers are usually shaped like cups or bells, either outward facing or drooping.

They range in color from white and green through pink and red to deep purple ('Party Dress' is pictured here). Flowers persist beyond bloom periods, gradually turning green.

Plants take full sun or part shade, and moderate to regular water, depending on species. Plant in well-drained soil amended with plenty of organic matter.


Graceful companions to many cool-season plants
Graceful companions to many cool-season plants


Iceland poppy (Papaver nudicaule)

Perennial in some zones
With their tall, leafless stems that dance in the breeze, Iceland poppies are graceful companions to many cool-season plants.

Iceland poppies grow 1 to 2 feet tall; flowers are cream, orange, pink, rose, salmon, yellow, or white. They need full sun and moderate to regular water.

In mild-winter climates, set out plants in fall or winter for months of cool-season color. Pick flowers freely to prolong the show.

In cold winter areas, sow seed in earliest spring for summer bloom; or set out plants in fall for bloom the following year.


Sow seeds in fall for winter and spring bloom
Sow seeds in fall for winter and spring bloom


Nemesia

Perennial
Nemesia grows to 2 feet tall and 1 foot wide, with small bright green leaves and upright stems. All nemesia need well-drained soil, full sun, and regular water. Some nemesia have intensely fragrant blossoms; others are unscented.

If you live in a mild-winter climate, you can sow seeds in fall for winter and spring bloom. Pinch to improve bushiness. Remove faded flowers to prolong bloom.


The color will intensify in the cold
The color will intensify in the cold


Ornamental kale

Annual
Giant rosettes of frilly leaves in lavender, rose, white, and creamy yellow make ornamental kales favorite additions to the winter garden.

Because these showy cabbage relatives tolerate cold weather and can hold their brilliant color all the way into spring, they're ideal for display on porches, patios, or beside entryways, or for massing in garden beds. They grow 1 to 2 feet tall.

Plant kale as soon as possible so heads develop fully; the color will intensify in the cold. Plant in full sun or light shade. Water regularly and feed every other week with a dilute liquid fertilizer like fish emulsion.
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Lots of blooms over a long period
Lots of blooms over a long period


Pansy

Annual
These low-growing plants (6 to 10 inches tall) with five-petaled flowers are top sellers year after year for good reason.

They deliver lots of blooms over a long period, come in a huge range of colors--both solids and bicolors--and bloom through winter in much of the West. ('Dynamite Blotch' is pictured here.)

The large-flowered, faced varieties may catch your eye first in nurseries. But when planted en masse, nonfaced, single-colored varieties are often more striking.


Comes in nearly every color
Comes in nearly every color


English primrose

Perennial
Most primroses bloom in spring or summer, but English primrose (as well as fairy primroses and Chinese primroses) are also excellent choices for winter color.

Circular flowers arise either alone or in clusters from a foliage rosette. English primrose (pictured here) comes in nearly every color and grows 8 to 12 inches high and 9 inches wide.

Primroses can take full sun in cooler climates, part to full shade otherwise. All need regular water.

They'll bloom all winter in mild climates
They'll bloom all winter in mild climates

Snapdragon
Perennial treated as annual

Snapdragons are among the best flowers for borders and cuttings, and they'll bloom all winter in mild-winter climates. (In cold climates, plant in spring.)

Flowers come in many colors and are divided into upper and lower "jaws." Some have double flowers, some are bell-shaped, and some blooms look like azaleas.

Flowers shoot from 1-3 feet tall and 6 inches to 2 feet wide. Set out plants from fall to spring in mild-winter areas. All take full sun and regular water.


Profuse spikes of spicy-sweet flowers
Profuse spikes of spicy-sweet flowers


Stock

Perennial treated as annual
Plant this old-fashioned favorite for its narrow gray-green leaves and profuse spikes of spicy-sweet smelling flowers. Take your pick of white, pink, red, purple, lavender, blue, yellow, and cream.

Stock varieties range from 1 to 3 feet tall and 10 to 16 inches wide. All perform best in full sun or light shade and appreciate regular water.

In cold-winter areas, plant in earliest spring (choose early bloomers). Stock needs good drainage, so where rainfall is heavy, plant in raised beds.


Bright yellow flowers appear in winter
Bright yellow flowers appear in winter


Winter jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum)

Perennial
The slender, willowy stems of this jasmine stand out beautifully in a winter landscape. Bright yellow flowers appear in winter or early spring, before handsome glossy, three-leafleted leaves unfurl. Don't be disappointed though--the flowers on this jasmine are unscented.

The vine will reach 4 feet high and 7 feet wide if unsupported. Train it on a trellis or wall and it will grow to 15 feet tall. Winter jasmine will grow in less-than-perfect conditions but will be a most prolific bloomer in full sun and good soil.

Cut back heavily before spring growth occurs to keep tidy, and pinch as needed throughout the year to control growth.


Happy colors and sweet fragrance
Happy colors and sweet fragrance


Viola

Annual
Like their relative the pansy, violas light up gray days with happy colors and sweet fragrance. They're a wonderful overwintering plant and self-sow readily.

Rain really beats down pansy flowers, but violas bounce back quickly.

Violas are smaller than pansies (between the size of a nickle and a quarter) but have more flowers per plant. They come in blue, yellow, white, and cream and bi-colored varieties. ('Penny Mickey' is pictured here.)

Use violas for mass color in borders and edging, as covers for spring bulbs, or for quick color in winter containers.

Violas take sun or part shade. Pick flowers to prolong bloom. Remove plants in summer if they begin to look ragged.

Before you plant, make sure each flower will grow well in your climate zone with our Plant Finder. And if you don't know your climate zone, look it up here.