- Silvery foliage adds stunning contrast and texture to garden beds.
- Many silver-leaved plants are remarkably drought-tolerant and thrive in sunny conditions.
- These plants offer year-round interest and beautiful pairings with flowering plants.
- Discover a selection of versatile silvery varieties to elevate your landscape design.
Gardening is often a world of vibrant greens and brilliant blooms, but sometimes the most captivating magic happens with a different palette. Step aside, greens, and make way for the shimmering, ethereal beauty of silvery foliage varieties! These plants bring a unique texture, brightness, and sophisticated elegance to any garden space, offering a cool contrast to their green neighbours and making colourful flowers pop even more. Beyond their visual appeal, many silver-leaved plants are surprisingly resilient, often preferring sunny spots and well-drained soil, making them perfect candidates for drier areas or low-maintenance designs. Let’s explore some delightful silvery treasures that can transform your garden.
Contents
Essential Silvery Foliage Varieties for Eye-Catching Design
Adding plants with silver or grey leaves is a fantastic way to introduce depth, light, and structure into your garden beds and containers. Their unique coloration can brighten shady corners or add a cool, frosted look to sunny borders. Here are some stunning varieties to consider.
Rose Campion
Known for its velvety, silver-grey leaves, Rose Campion brings a soft, felt-like texture to the garden. This plant forms lovely clumps of foliage that provide excellent contrast, especially when its vibrant magenta flowers appear in late summer, attracting cheerful pollinators. While short-lived, it often self-seeds, ensuring a continued presence in your garden.
- Scientific Name: Lychnis coronaria
- Common Name: Rose Campion
- Zone: USDA 4-8
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Average
- Water: Low to average; prefers dry, well-drained soil
Velvety silver-grey foliage of Lychnis coronaria in a sunny garden bed
Honeywort
Honeywort is a fantastic hardy annual celebrated for its unique, silvery blue-green leaves that spiral around its stems. This architectural foliage is paired with charming, bell-shaped purple flowers that are a absolute magnet for bees. It’s a wonderful plant for filling gaps and adds a modern, slightly unusual touch to borders. It also makes a great cut flower and readily self-seeds for next year’s display.
- Scientific Name: Cerinthe major ‘Purpurascens’
- Common Name: Honeywort, Blue Shrimp Plant
- Zone: Typically grown as an annual, but hardy in USDA 7-11
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Average
- Water: Average; requires moist but well-drained soil
Silvery blue-green leaves and purple bell flowers of Cerinthe major Purpurascens attracting bees
Bluebeard
This attractive shrub offers a double treat: beautiful silvery blue-green foliage throughout the season and a late-summer display of deep blue flowers. ‘Sterling Silver’ is a particularly notable cultivar for its striking leaf colour. Bluebeard works well in containers or at the front of a sunny border. Pruning it hard after flowering encourages vigorous growth and the best floral show the following year.
- Scientific Name: Caryopteris x clandonensis ‘Sterling Silver’
- Common Name: Bluebeard
- Zone: USDA 5-9
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Average
- Water: Low to average; thrives in well-drained soil
Silvery blue-green leaves of Caryopteris clandonensis Sterling Silver shrub
Cardoon
For a dramatic statement, you can’t beat the Cardoon. Its huge, architectural, thistle-like foliage is a magnificent shade of silvery grey. Tall stems rise above the leaves, topped with buds resembling small globe artichokes, which open into large, furry purple thistle flowers. These flowers are a pollinator haven, buzzing with bees. Cardoon is perfect as a specimen plant or at the back of a large border where its size and texture can be appreciated.
- Scientific Name: Cynara cardunculus
- Common Name: Cardoon, Artichoke Thistle
- Zone: USDA 7-10 (often grown as an annual in colder zones)
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Average
- Water: Average; prefers fertile, well-drained soil
Silver Bush
As its name suggests, the Silver Bush is all about that stunning silver. Convolvulus cneorum is an evergreen shrub with slender leaves densely covered in silky-grey hairs, giving it a luminous, frosted appearance. In summer, delicate pink buds open to reveal blush-white trumpet-shaped flowers with a subtle pink stripe. This compact shrub is ideal for the front of a border, rockeries, or containers, needing impeccable drainage.
- Scientific Name: Convolvulus cneorum
- Common Name: Silver Bush
- Zone: USDA 8-10
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Low to average
- Water: Low; requires very well-drained soil
Luminous evergreen silvery foliage of Convolvulus cneorum bush
Cotton Lavender
Despite its common name, Cotton Lavender (Santolina chamaecyparissus) isn’t a lavender but shares a love for sunny, dry conditions and boasts aromatic, finely divided silvery foliage. This neat, rounded evergreen shrub forms a compact mound, perfect for edging paths, rockeries, or growing in pots. Small, cheerful yellow pompon flowers appear in summer, adding a splash of color against the silver leaves. The ‘Pretty Carol’ cultivar is a smaller, charming option.
- Scientific Name: Santolina chamaecyparissus
- Common Name: Cotton Lavender
- Zone: USDA 6-9
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Low to average
- Water: Low; requires excellent drainage
Compact mound of silvery, aromatic foliage of Santolina chamaecyparissus Cotton Lavender
Sea Holly
For lovers of spiky textures and steely hues, Sea Holly (Eryngium) is a must-have. These architectural plants feature striking, often silvery or grey-blue foliage and produce unique, thistle-like flower heads surrounded by spiky bracts from mid to late summer. Eryngium giganteum ‘Silver Ghost’ is particularly renowned for its intense silver color. They are fantastic in gravel gardens or mixed borders, providing excellent structure and attracting pollinators.
- Scientific Name: Eryngium species (e.g., E. giganteum ‘Silver Ghost’)
- Common Name: Sea Holly
- Zone: USDA 4-9 (varies by species)
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Low to average
- Water: Low; prefers free-draining soil
Steely silvery bracts and flowers of Eryngium Sea Holly variety
Curry Plant
Yes, it smells like curry! Helichrysum italicum, the Curry Plant, is a small evergreen sub-shrub grown primarily for its highly aromatic, needle-like silvery foliage. While its clusters of small, bright yellow flowers in summer are a bonus, it’s the scent and silver texture that truly stand out. Grow it in a sunny, sheltered spot where you can brush past the leaves to release their fragrance. Regular pruning keeps it compact and bushy.
- Scientific Name: Helichrysum italicum
- Common Name: Curry Plant, Immortelle
- Zone: USDA 7-9
- Light: Full sun
- Humidity: Low to average
- Water: Low; requires well-drained soil
Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Silver Queen’
While its base colour is green, Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Silver Queen’ earns its spot among silvery foliage varieties due to the prominent white, sometimes slightly pink-tinged, margins on its wavy leaves. This creates a striking variegated effect that gives the plant an overall silvery appearance. This evergreen shrub is excellent as a specimen plant or can be trimmed into an elegant hedge. Small, fragrant purple flowers appear discreetly in late spring. It prefers a sheltered position.
- Scientific Name: Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Silver Queen’
- Common Name: Kohuhu ‘Silver Queen’
- Zone: USDA 8-10
- Light: Full sun to partial shade
- Humidity: Average
- Water: Average; prefers moist, well-drained soil
Variegated green leaves with wide white margins giving a silvery effect on Pittosporum tenuifolium Silver Queen
Brunnera macrophylla ‘Jack Frost’
Unlike most silver-leaved plants that crave sun, ‘Jack Frost’ Brunnera is a star for shadier spots. Its heart-shaped leaves are heavily overlaid with a shimmering silver pattern, leaving only the veins and edges green. This gives the foliage a striking, frosted look that brightens up woodland gardens or shady borders. Delicate sprays of tiny blue forget-me-not-like flowers appear in spring, complementing the cool foliage. It forms a lovely clump and is relatively low maintenance.
- Scientific Name: Brunnera macrophylla ‘Jack Frost’
- Common Name: Siberian Bugloss ‘Jack Frost’
- Zone: USDA 3-8
- Light: Partial shade to full shade
- Humidity: High to average
- Water: Average; prefers consistently moist, well-drained soil
Heavily silver-patterned heart-shaped leaves of Brunnera macrophylla Jack Frost in a shady garden
Tips for Growing Silvery Foliage Plants
Most plants with silvery foliage have adapted to dry, sunny conditions. Their silver colour often comes from fine hairs or a waxy coating on the leaves, which helps reflect sunlight and reduce water loss. This means good drainage is crucial; they often dislike wet feet, especially in winter. Planting in sandy, gravelly, or loamy soil amended with grit is usually ideal. While many love full sun, a few exceptions like the Brunnera show that silver can shine in shade too!
Conclusion
Incorporating silvery foliage varieties into your garden design offers endless possibilities. Their unique texture and colour provide fantastic contrast, highlight nearby flowers, and ensure interest even when plants aren’t in bloom. From the velvety softness of Rose Campion to the architectural form of Cardoon and the shimmering pattern of Brunnera, there’s a silver-leaved plant perfect for almost any spot. Why not add a touch of silver magic to your landscape this season?
Have you grown any of these silvery beauties? Which is your favourite? Share your experiences or ask your questions in the comments below! Find more gardening inspiration and plant profiles on Thelittle.garden.