Shade Lovers

The garden under the canopy. Shade is not a problem to solve but a place to plant, and these are the ferns, foliage plants, and quiet bloomers that make the cool, dim ground beneath trees and walls into one of the loveliest parts of a garden.

99 plants in this collection

№ 021
Iris verna, dwarf violet iris, with a small violet-blue flower marked by an orange signal above narrow grassy leaves
Dwarf Violet Iris
Iris vernaDwarf Violet Iris

Iris verna is one of those plants that feels like a secret, small, fragrant, and impossibly charming once noticed. Native to the pinewoods and sandy slopes of the eastern United States, this understated iris has been a spring companion for centuries, brightening forest floors long before gardeners thought to give the plant a place at home.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
6–8 in.
Spread
6–8 in.
Bloom
Blue
Plant type
Perennial
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 022
Itea virginica 'Shirley's Compact' dwarf Virginia sweetspire, a miniature native shrub with tiny twisted leaves in a tight mound.
Dwarf Sweetspire 'Shirley's Compact'
Itea virginica ‘Shirley's Compact’Dwarf Sweetspire 'Shirley's Compact'

Itea virginica, the Virginia sweetspire, is a native shrub of eastern wetlands, familiar in gardens for fragrant white flower spikes and fiery fall color. 'Shirley's Compact,' sometimes called Shirley's Midget, takes the species to an extreme: a true miniature, a dense little bun of a plant with tiny, twisted, inch-long leaves, growing so slowly that a ten-year-old clump may stand only a foot or a foot and a half tall while spreading two or three feet wide.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
12–18 in.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 023
Leucothoe populifolia Florida leucothoe, arching stems of glossy evergreen leaves with creamy-white spring bells
Florida Leucothoe
Leucothoe populifoliaFlorida Leucothoe

Leucothoe populifolia, still fondly called Agarista populifolia by those who knew the plant before the name changed, is the giant of a genus otherwise built low to the ground. Where most leucothoes hug the shade at knee height, this one climbs, sending up tall, erect stems that arch at the tips into a fountain of glossy evergreen leaves, and given years and room the shrub can pass for a small multi-stemmed tree of twelve to fifteen feet.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
12–15 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 024
Osmunda regalis, royal fern, with bold arching twice-cut green fronds.
Royal Fern
Osmunda regalisRoyal Fern

Osmunda regalis, the royal fern, is a plant of stature and quiet nobility, at home where the woods remember water and time moves slowly. The genus Osmunda gives its name to an ancient family, the Osmundaceae, sometimes called the flowering ferns, with a fossil lineage that reaches back past the Jurassic; a royal fern in the garden is a living relic of a far older flora. The natural range runs from Nova Scotia to Florida in North America, and on through Europe, Africa, and Asia, making this one of the most widely distributed ferns on earth. Both the common name and the Latin regalis salute the same quality: among the largest and most robust of all North American herbaceous plants, the royal fern reaches four to six feet where truly content.

Hardiness
Zones 3–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
3–6 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Plant type
Fern
Traditional use
pain relief, topical applications, respiratory support
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 025
Phlox divaricata, wild blue phlox, lavender-blue spring flowers over a low foliage mat.
Wild Blue Phlox
Phlox divaricataWild Blue Phlox

Wild blue phlox turned up in the Woodlanders catalog almost by insisting on it, growing in the woods around Aiken the way the plant has for as long as anyone can remember. We have watched these colonies for years, and taking this long to offer them is either a comment on our patience or on our woody bias. Possibly both.

Hardiness
Zones 3–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
10–15 in.
Spread
12–24 in.
Bloom
Blue
Plant type
Perennial
$14.00Currently unavailable
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№ 026
Polemonium reptans, creeping Jacob's ladder, sky-blue spring flowers over ladder-like foliage.
Creeping Jacob's Ladder
Polemonium reptansCreeping Jacob's Ladder

A spring-blooming native of the eastern woodlands, found from Ontario and Quebec south through the Appalachians and as far west as Minnesota and Oklahoma, growing on rich deciduous forest floors, along streambanks, and at the bases of sandstone canyons. Polemonium reptans is one of those native plants that rewards close attention. The leaves are pinnately compound, with seven to twenty-one paired leaflets running up each stem like the rungs of a ladder, the source of the common name, which gestures all the way back to the biblical Jacob and his dream of a stairway to heaven. The genus name is older still: Polemonium honors King Polemon of Pontus, an ancient Greek ruler with a side interest in herbalism.

Hardiness
Zones 3–8
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
1–2 ft.
Bloom
Blue
Plant type
Perennial
Traditional use
respiratory support, detoxification & cleansing, topical applications, general wellness
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 027
Polygonatum commutatum, great Solomon's seal, arching stem with pendant white bell flowers.
Great Solomon's Seal
Polygonatum commutatumGreat Solomon's Seal

Polygonatum commutatum, the great or giant Solomon's seal, is a bold native perennial of the eastern North American woodlands, sending up tall, unbranched, gracefully arching stems clad in broad, oval, alternate leaves. From the leaf axils along the underside of each stem hang small, creamy-white, bell-shaped flowers, usually in pairs, in late spring and early summer.

Hardiness
Zones 3–8
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
3–5 ft.
Spread
1–2 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Perennial
Traditional use
pain relief, digestive health, respiratory support, general wellness
$16.00Currently unavailable
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№ 028
Smilax pumila, dwarf greenbrier, mottled arrow-shaped evergreen leaves of a thornless groundcover.
Sarsaparilla Vine
Smilax pumilaSarsaparilla Vine

Dwarf greenbrier is the gentlest member of a prickly clan. Where most of the greenbriers, the Smilax vines, arm themselves with vicious hooks, Smilax pumila comes up soft and unarmed, a low, scrambling, evergreen groundcover of the Southeastern coastal plain, safe to handle and easy to place. The mottled, arrow-shaped leaves hold a quiet, marbled green through the year, and on female plants clusters of bright orange to red berries glow in the winter undergrowth like drops of fire.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
12–15 in.
Spread
24–36 in.
Plant type
Groundcover
Traditional use
pain relief, digestive health, detoxification & cleansing
$25.00Currently unavailable
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№ 029
Taxus floridana, Florida yew, flat dark-green needles on a rare evergreen conifer.
Florida Yew
Taxus floridanaFlorida Yew

Florida yew is one of the rarest conifers in North America, a shrubby evergreen restricted to a single stretch of steep, cool ravines along the eastern bluffs of the Apalachicola River in the Florida Panhandle, and nowhere else on Earth. A shrub or small tree of the shaded understory, the plant carries flat, soft, dark-green needles and, on female plants, the fleshy scarlet arils that mark every yew.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
15–20 ft.
Spread
15–20 ft.
Plant type
Conifer
$44.00Currently unavailable
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№ 030
Viola walteri, Walter's violet, native groundcover with silvered leaves and purple undersides
Walter's Violet
Viola walteriWalter's Violet

A native violet grown as much for the leaf as the flower. Viola walteri, Walter's violet, belongs to the violet family, Violaceae, and honors the British-born botanist Thomas Walter, whose Flora Caroliniana of 1788 was the first flora of the American Southeast. The prostrate blue violet ranges in the wild from Texas east to Florida and north to Virginia and Ohio, threading the floors of moist deciduous woodlands and shaded rocky ledges.

Hardiness
Zones 7–8
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
2–3 in.
Spread
5–6 in.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Groundcover
$16.00Currently unavailable
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№ 031
Xanthorhiza simplicissima, native yellowroot groundcover, ferny green foliage
Yellowroot
Xanthorhiza simplicissimaYellowroot

John Bartram collected Xanthorhiza simplicissima from the Carolina mountains sometime before 1776 and brought the plant back to his famous Philadelphia garden, which tells you two things: that yellowroot has been in cultivation for as long as this country has existed, and that people who know plants have always recognized something worth paying attention to here. The Cherokee had known the plant far longer, using the roots, sliced open to reveal a vivid, almost electric chrome yellow, as a dye, a bitter tonic, and a medicine for ailments from mouth sores to stomach complaints. The active compound is berberine, the same antimicrobial alkaloid found in goldenseal, and the roots produce berberine in striking quantity. Xanthorhiza is Greek for yellow root, and the name is no metaphor.

Hardiness
Zones 3–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
2–3 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Groundcover
Traditional use
digestive health, respiratory support, topical applications
$18.40Currently unavailable
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