Bleeding Heart
Perk up the dark corners of your landscape with a generous helping of bleeding heart (Lamprocapnos spectabilis). These hardy shade perennials develop graceful, arching branches of heart-shaped flowers that have a tiny teardrop at the base of each bloom. Besides its lovely flowers, bleeding heart also produces pretty, ferny, blue-green foliage. This no-fuss plant goes dormant in middle to late summer and reappears the following spring.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in medium moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 3 feet tall
Zones: 3-9
Fuchsia
Cool, shady locations are the ideal environment for fuchsias, which aren’t very heat tolerant (they aren’t a good choice for warmer climates). Many fuchsia species form small shrubs in mild climates and are hardy in Zones 7 and 8. Others are treated as annuals and grown in hanging baskets that showcase eye-catching, pendulous flowers. The plant’s long-lasting blooms in red, pink, white, violet, and purple are a favorite of hummingbirds and butterflies.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in evenly moist, moisture-retentive soil
Size: Up to 2 feet tall
Zones: 10-11
Astilbe
No shade garden is complete without astilbe. These rugged, long-blooming perennials thrive in moist shade, providing you with a summer’s worth of feathery flower heads. And even when not in bloom, the plants’ mounded, fernlike foliage is pretty, too. Astilbe flowers come in white, red, pink, orange, and violet, and generally start to appear in late spring and early summer.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 18 inches tall
Zones: 3-8
Toad Lily
With a name like toad lily (Tricyrtis hirta) you might not expect much in terms of beauty, but this hardy perennial turns into a prince in the late summer, producing jewellike white flowers generously splashed with purple spots. Capable of blooming in full shade, toad lily will slowly naturalize a small area, carpeting it with a late-season flourish of color.
Size: Up to 3 feet tall
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in medium to wet, well-drained soil
Zones: 4-8
New Guinea Impatiens
Large, colorful flowers make New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens hawkeri) a must-have annual plant for your shade garden. New Guinea impatiens seem to thrive better in containers than they do when planted directly in the garden. But, grown either way, they add tons of spectacular color to the dark corners of your landscape. Bloom colors include pink, red, white, orange, lavender, and bicolor. The leaves can be dark green, green with red veins, or cream and green. It’s possible to grow New Guinea impatiens from seed, but it’s a lot easier and faster to buy young plants in the spring at your local garden center.
Growing Conditions: Part shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 4 feet tall
Zones: 10-11
Wax Begonia
A no-fail shade plant, wax begonia (Semperflorens Cultorum Group of Begonia) grows easily in your garden and needs very little maintenance. This mounded, compact plant has thick, fleshy stems with bronze or green leaves and is almost always in bloom, sporting clusters of white, pink, red, or bicolor flowers right up until frost. The plants thrive in both containers and borders. Extra showy, double-flowered varieties are also available.
Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 1 foot tall
Zones: 10-11
Impatiens walleriana
A go-to flower for shady spots, impatiens (Impatiens walleriana) will transform any dark corner into a flower festival. Many gardeners use impatiens as a quick-growing summer groundcover for hard-to-plant locations under tall trees. Both single- and double-flowering varieties are available and bloom in white, pink, peach, yellow, orange, lavender, and bicolors. Impatiens grow well in containers, too. If your garden has been affected by outbreaks of downy mildew disease, switch to New Guinea impatiens or wax begonias, which are immune to the problem.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 2 feet tall
Zones: 10-11
Viola
A shady border garden packed with the happy faces of viola is always a cheerful sight. These joyous spring bloomers (close cousins to pansies) almost seem to smile at you whenever you approach. Violas produce a seemingly endless supply of irresistibly perky flowers during cool seasons (they peter out in summer heat). Colors vary, but most varieties show off bicolor flowers in shades of white, blue, purple, yellow, orange, red, or lilac.
Growing Conditions: Part shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 9 inches tall
Zones: 5-8
Wishbone Flower
Look closely into this shade plant’s blooms, and you’ll see stamens forming a wishbone shape, which is how the plant got its common name: wishbone flower (Torenia fournieri). This hardworking plant puts out a big show of jewellike, trumpet-shaped flowers throughout the summer. In warm climate regions, older varieties will sulk during hot weather, but newer varieties will continue to bloom through summer heat. Remove the faded flowers as needed to promote additional bloom.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in consistently moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 1 foot tall
Zones: 10-11
Ajuga
If you’re looking to add color to your shade garden with both flowers and foliage, ajuga (Ajuga reptans) is a tough perennial groundcover that features bright green, bronze, or tricolor leaves, and every spring it sends up spikes of blue, purple, or white flowers. When flowering, this plant can make a striking display in containers. And because of its spreading nature, keeping ajuga in pots or other small spaces where it can’t invade lawns is best.
Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 9 inches tall
Zones: 3-10
Lungwort
In the early spring, you can depend on the attractively spotted or splotched leaves of lungwort (Pulmonaria saccharata) to give your garden an early jolt of color. After the leaves are established, the plants send up graceful bell-shaped stalks with pink flowers that mature into shades of baby blue, which means that you might find both blue and pink flowers on the same stalk. This deer-resistant perennial will slowly spread through your garden without becoming invasive.
Growing Conditions: Part to full shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 18 inches tall
Zones: 3-8
Heartleaf Brunnera
With colorful flowers and foliage, you can’t go wrong with heartleaf brunnera (Brunnera macrophylla), also known as Siberian bugloss and false forget-me-not (its blooms resemble those of true forget-me-not). In spring, this shade garden perennial develops clouds of small, bright blue flowers atop a mound of heart-shaped leaves. It’s the perfect partner for spring bulbs, such as daffodils and tulips. And even when its flowers fade, you can enjoy this plant’s pretty foliage all summer long; some varieties have silvery or variegated leaves that brighten up shady corners.
Growing Conditions: Part shade in consistently moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 1 foot tall
Zones: 3-8
Hosta
Hostas are one of the best plants for shady gardens. Their leaves come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and colors, so you can mix and match them with each other and other shade plants to create a dynamic display. Many hosta varieties also develop showy white or lavender flowers from midsummer to fall.
Growing Conditions: Part shade to full shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 3 feet tall
Zones: 4-9
Coral Bells
Some types of coral bells (Heuchera spp.) offer colorful foliage in shades of red, bronze, green, plum, or chartreuse to brighten up a shady spot. Others offer showy wands of pink, white, or red bell-like flowers that bloom from late spring to early summer.
Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade in evenly moist, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 18 inches tall
Zones: 3-8
Leopard’s Bane
One of the earliest flowering perennials in the aster family, leopard’s bane (Doronicum orientale) shoots up bright yellow daisy-like flowers just as spring is getting underway. This eager perennial makes a wonderful companion for spring-flowering bulbs, such as scilla, daffodil, and tulip. To encourage fall flowering, be sure to deadhead its spent blooms.
Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade in evenly moist, fertile soil
Size: Up to 2 feet tall
Zones: 4-8
Hellebore
Just when you thought winter was never going to end, the beautiful blooms of hellebore (Helleborus spp.) burst into bloom. Commonly called Lenten rose, hellebores are one of the first perennials to bloom in the spring, often before the snow melts. Most varieties of this nearly indestructible shade garden plant develop downward-facing white, pink, green, or purple blooms that are often delicately etched in a contrasting color. Although most varieties have single flowers, a few also offer showy double blooms.
Growing Conditions: Part shade to full shade in humusy, well-drained soil
Size: Up to 18 inches tall
Zones: 4-9
Coleus
No story on colorful shade plants is complete without including coleus. This popular foliage plant is available in a variety of leaf combinations that add vivid color to your shade garden right up until frost. Coleus will occasionally flower, producing a narrow blue spike in late summer, but the plants do better if you clip the spike away as soon as it appears.
Growing Conditions: Part shade to full shade in moist soil
Size: Up to 3 feet tall
Zones: 10-11