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Iris hollandica 'Purple Sensation' is a Dutch iris of impeccable poise, producing richly purple blooms neatly highlighted with sunny yellow markings. Rising above slender, bright green foliage on elegant stems, it brings a crisp, contemporary note to spring borders and is equally accomplished in pots.
It is also a superb choice for cutting—refined in a vase, and effortlessly smart when gathered into simple, tailored arrangements.
- Colour: Deep purple with yellow markings
- Flowering: May–June
- Height: 60cm
- Bulb size supplied: 7/8
- Position: Full sun; sheltered spot preferred
- Best for: Cutting, containers, borders and naturalising
Muscari 'Cool Blues' is a particularly refined grape hyacinth, valued for its cool-toned spring colour and neat, clump-forming habit. Slender green foliage rises to carry densely packed, bell-shaped flower spikes—an elegant detail at the very moment the garden begins to wake.
Thread it through the front of borders, edge a path with gentle repetition, or tuck into containers where the colour can be appreciated up close. It pairs beautifully with tulips and narcissus for a composed, early-season display, and also lends itself to naturalising in grass for an unforced, meadow-like finish.
- Colour: Cool blue
- Flowering: March–May
- Height: 15–20cm
- Spread: 10–15cm
- Bulb size supplied: 6/7
- Position: Borders, containers, rockeries; ideal for naturalising in grass
Muscari azureum ‘Blue’ is a particularly refined grape hyacinth, offering airy, light blue spires that arrive in the first true moments of spring. Neat, clump-forming and beautifully obliging, it threads a soft ribbon of colour through the front of borders, pots, rockeries and naturalistic planting beneath deciduous shrubs.
- Flowering: March–April
- Height: 25cm
- Spread: 10cm
- Position: Front of border, edging, under deciduous shrubs
- Bulb size: 6/7
- Pollinator friendly: Yes
- Deer resistant: Yes
Planted in generous drifts, it reads as quietly luxurious—cool blue notes with just enough freshness to lift mixed spring schemes. Allow around two seasons to settle properly, and it will reward you with a dependable return.
Ipheion uniflorum ‘Wisley Blue’ is a delightfully refined spring starflower, offering lilac-blue, starry blooms with a gentle fragrance. Sitting neatly above light green, strap-like foliage, it lends itself beautifully to informal drifts through borders, the gravel garden, and quietly charming containers near a doorway or terrace.
Compact and clump-forming, it is particularly well suited to underplanting beneath shrubs and at the woodland edge, where it will settle in and return reliably each year.
- Colour: Lilac-blue
- Flowering: February to April
- Height x spread: 10cm x 10cm
- Hardiness: Fully Hardy
- Position: Full-Sun or Partial Sun
- Soil: Well-drained loam, any pH
- Planting time: September to December
- Supplied as: Bulbs (5/6cm)
Narcissus 'Lobularis' is a quietly enchanting, natural-form narcissus—starry white petals set off by a fresh, open yellow cup. It has a pleasingly unforced look, as though it has always belonged, and it settles beautifully into lawns, orchard grass, and at the soft margin of woodland.
Notably accommodating, it will flower well in full sun and is also content in light shade, making it a refined choice beneath deciduous trees or along a less formal border. Plant in generous drifts for a graceful spring effect that improves as it establishes.
- Flowering: April
- Colour: White with a bright yellow cup
- Best for: Naturalising in grass, woodland edge, pots & containers
Camassia quamash 'Blue Melody' is a quietly distinctive quamash, prized for its refined, cream-edged foliage and richly coloured, starry blue flowers that arrive in late spring and early summer. Compact and clump-forming, it brings a poised, natural elegance to meadow-style planting, informal borders, and grass that’s allowed a touch of freedom.
Plant in autumn and allow it time to settle; by its second season it will begin to show its true character, offering graceful vertical notes and a fresh, variegated leaf presence even before the flowers appear. A charming choice for cutting too—small, considered posies with a natural air.
- Flowering: May–June
- Height: 30cm
- Habit: Clump-forming perennial
- Best for: Naturalising, borders, cottage & informal gardens, cut flowers
Triteleia 'Hyacinthina' (wild hyacinth) is a charming, bulb-like corm for those who appreciate a lighter touch in late spring and early summer planting schemes. Slender, upright stems carry airy umbels of neat, funnel-shaped white flowers—fresh, poised, and effortlessly elegant when threaded through borders or gravel gardens.
It also makes a particularly refined cut flower, lending a calm, meadowy sophistication to simple arrangements.
- Flowering: May–July
- Height: 40–60cm
- Spread: 10–20cm
- Position: Full sun or partial sun; sheltered
- Soil: Well-drained loam (any pH)
Scilla 'Bifolia Blue' is a small but beautifully poised spring bulb, sending up clear blue, star-shaped flowers on a neat, low habit. It is particularly well suited to naturalising—tucked through grass, beneath shrubs, or threaded into the front of borders—where it will quietly return each year with minimal fuss.
It is equally charming in pots and troughs, where the colour reads as crisp and fresh in early spring. Plant in autumn, then allow the foliage to die back naturally after flowering to build strength for seasons to come.
Why you’ll love it
- Refined, clear blue flowers with a star-shaped form
- Excellent for naturalising in lawns, under shrubs, and in borders
- Ideal for pots, troughs, and small-space planting
- Pollinator-friendly and fully hardy
At a glance
- Botanical name: Scilla bifolia
- Variety: 'Bifolia Blue'
- Bulb size: 5/6
- Flowering: March–April
- Height: 25cm
- Spread: 10cm
- Spacing: 5–8cm
- Position: Borders, under shrubs, lawns/grass, pots and containers
- Sun: Full sun or partial sun
- Soil: Well-drained soil
- Moisture: Moist but well-drained
- Hardiness: Fully hardy
Camassia 'Caerulea' is an elegant, statuesque bulb for late spring, sending up refined spires of star-shaped violet-blue flowers above fresh, linear foliage. It has a wonderfully natural poise—equally at home threaded through meadow-style grass, used in generous drifts at the woodland edge, or brought forward in mixed borders where its height adds calm structure.
Plant in autumn and allow it time to settle; once established, it returns faithfully and can gently increase over the years. For the most effortless look, weave through grass and let the stems rise like a quiet flourish in May and June.
- Colour: blue-purple
- Flowering: May–June
- Height: 100–150cm
- Best for: naturalising, borders, woodland gardens, cottage & informal planting, cut flowers
- Pollinator friendly: yes
Camassia 'Maybelle' is a beautifully mannered choice for naturalistic planting—compact in character yet wonderfully luminous in flower. Fresh, linear green foliage rises into neat, upright spires of clear blue blooms with the softest purple nuance, bringing a poised lift to late-spring borders and meadow-style schemes.
Equally at home threaded through grass or grouped in informal drifts, it settles in with quiet ease and returns year after year, offering reliable colour and a welcome pause between early bulbs and summer perennials. The flower spikes also make an elegant cut stem for simple, airy arrangements.
- Refined late-spring colour in clear blue with a gentle purple tint
- Ideal for naturalising through grass, meadows and relaxed borders
- Fully hardy and easy, thriving in moist but well-drained soil
- Pollinator friendly and pleasantly useful as a cut flower
Fritillaria imperialis ‘William Rex’ brings a wonderfully architectural note to the spring border. Each tall stem carries a rich crown of bronze-red to orange, nodding bells, finished with a crisp tuft of leafy bracts—formal enough for a structured scheme, yet perfectly at ease in a relaxed cottage planting.
Plant in autumn and allow this crown imperial to settle in; once established it makes a refined statement among tulips, early perennials and fresh green foliage, and it is also valued for being pollinator friendly and deer resistant.
- Why we love it: statuesque, theatrical spring flowers with a beautifully tailored silhouette
- Best for: borders, naturalising, cottage and informal gardens, and smart city plots
- Seasonal moment: a confident flourish from early to late spring
Fritillaria ‘Yellow Beauty’ brings a poised note to the spring garden: tall, upright stems carrying soft yellow, bell-shaped blooms above glossy green foliage. It is particularly handsome threaded through mixed borders, and equally at home naturalising in well-drained ground where it can settle in and return with quiet regularity.
- Colour & form: soft yellow, bell-shaped flowers with fresh green foliage
- Garden use: borders, naturalising, and cutting
- Season of interest: spring flowering (March–May)
- Bulb size: 18/20
- Hardiness: fully hardy
Plant in autumn and allow two seasons to properly establish; the resulting spires are wonderfully architectural among tulips, late daffodils, and early perennials.
Puschkinia scilloides var. libanotica is the sort of small bulb that earns its place by sheer refinement. Low, neat and quietly pretty, it sends up slender green leaves followed by dainty, star-shaped flowers—white with the faintest pale blue striping—just as the garden begins to wake in early spring.
Ideal for naturalising, it weaves beautifully through grass, beneath deciduous shrubs, or at the front of borders. It is equally charming in pots, where its fine detail can be enjoyed up close.
- Flower: Star-shaped, white with pale blue stripe
- Best for: Naturalising, rock gardens, containers, underplanting shrubs
- Season: Plant in autumn for spring display
Anemone 'Lipsiensis Nemorosa' is a quietly distinguished woodland anemone, offering soft yellow-white, single blooms as spring begins to stir. Ideal for weaving through shaded borders and beneath deciduous trees, it settles into humus-rich ground and, in time, forms an elegant, low carpet of fresh green foliage and flowers.
Plant in autumn and allow it to establish at its own unhurried pace; the effect is particularly lovely when naturalised in drifts, or used to soften the edge of a woodland path. It is fully hardy and well-suited to pots and containers where light is dappled and the soil stays gently moist.
- Flowering: March–April
- Colour: pale yellow to yellow-white
- Habit: ground cover, perennial
- Best position: woodland edge; under deciduous trees and shrubs
Allium ursinum (ramsons) is a charming native allium, prized for its broad, fresh green leaves and neat, starry white flowers in spring. It is particularly well suited to lightly shaded corners and woodland-style planting, where it will naturalise beautifully and, in time, form handsome colonies.
For an elegant, relaxed effect, tuck the bulbs beneath deciduous trees or along the edge of a shady path, where the display can return with quiet reliability each year.
- Colour & form: star-shaped white flowers over mid green foliage
- Best for: woodland gardens, naturalising and ground cover
- Garden value: pollinator friendly and pleasingly low-fuss
Ipheion ‘Alberto Castillo’ is a quietly distinguished little starflower, prized for its crisp white, starry blooms, each petal finished with the most delicate hint of green at the centre. Emerging in late winter and carrying on through early spring, it makes a neat, light-green carpet that looks wonderfully composed in drifts.
Superb for naturalising through grass, threading beneath shrubs and roses, or bringing a fresh note to patio pots by the door. Fully hardy and notably unfussy, it’s an elegant way to lift the garden when the season still feels young.
- Flowering: February–April
- Height: 20cm
- Bulb size: 5/6cm
- Best for: naturalising, containers, underplanting
Please note: Deer resistance can vary by location and pressure; this variety is generally avoided, but cannot be guaranteed.
Scilla hyacinthoides ‘Blue Arrow’ is a wonderfully architectural spring bulb, sending up tall, airy spires of pale violet-blue, star-shaped flowers above neat, strap-like foliage. It’s the sort of plant that looks perfectly at home threaded through gravel, rising from a sunny border, or quietly naturalised through grass—an elegant way to extend the season into late spring and early summer.
Once settled, ‘Blue Arrow’ returns reliably, forming a clump with an upright habit and a refined, contemporary silhouette. Plant in generous drifts for the most assured effect.
- Flowering: May–June
- Style notes: tall, starry spires in a poised violet-blue
- Ideal for: naturalising in grass, gravel gardens, sunny borders
Narcissus 'Salome' is a quietly glamorous large-cupped daffodil, prized for its gentle colour journey. Creamy petals frame a cup that opens warm yellow, then softens into an elegant peach-pink flush—an especially flattering note in early spring borders and refined container displays.
Plant in autumn and allow it to settle in; by its second season it forms neat, clump-forming drifts that look equally at home threaded through grass for naturalising or arranged in generous groups for a more formal effect. Fully hardy and pleasingly straightforward, it’s a classic choice with a subtle twist.
- Large, cup-shaped blooms with a mellow, shifting palette
- Ideal for borders, pots and naturalising in grass
- Excellent for cutting, bringing a soft, luminous tone indoors
- Pollinator friendly
Allium 'Small Flowering Mix' is a thoughtfully balanced selection of small-flowered ornamental alliums, chosen for a natural, meadow-like finish. Rising neatly through late-spring planting schemes, the airy globes bring a refined lift to borders and gravel gardens, and they are equally at home in pots where their lightness can be appreciated up close.
Ideal for weaving between perennials and ornamental grasses, this mix is also a quietly excellent choice for cutting—adding a fine, architectural note to simple arrangements.
Why you’ll love it
- Graceful, small allium globes for an informal, naturalised look
- Beautiful threaded through borders, gravel gardens, and containers
- Pollinator friendly, and typically avoided by deer and rodents
- Fully hardy and straightforward to grow
At a glance
- Flowering: May–June
- Height: 40–60cm
- Spacing: 10–15cm
- Bulb size supplied: 4/5, 5/6
- Position: Borders, gravel gardens, containers; naturalising in grass
Anemone blanda 'Mixed' is one of spring’s most charming little luxuries: a low, naturalising drift of starry, daisy-like flowers in jewel shades of blue, purple and pink, each finished with a neat golden centre. Thread it through borders, underplant deciduous shrubs, or tuck into pots by the door for early-season colour with a light, effortless air.
These fully hardy corms settle in quickly and, in the right spot, will return to form a fresh carpet year after year—particularly lovely in rock gardens, at the front of borders, and dotted through lawns for a quietly romantic look.
- Flowering: March–May
- Height: 10–15cm
- Spread: 10–15cm
- Position: Full sun or partial sun (sheltered)
- Soil: Moist but well-drained loam; any pH
- Type: Perennial corm (Fully Hardy)
Narcissus 'Quail' is a refined jonquil-type daffodil, valued for its richly coloured, deep yellow blooms and a pleasing fragrance that feels wonderfully at home in spring. The flowers are carried in small clusters on neat stems, making this an excellent choice for patio pots, borders, and for naturalising through grass where it will settle in gracefully over time.
With a clump-forming habit and an easy disposition, it’s a quietly confident performer—tidy in the garden, charming in a vase, and particularly handsome when planted in generous drifts.
- Flowering: March to May
- Height: 40cm
- Bulb size supplied: 12/14
- Scent: Fragrant
- Perfect for: containers, naturalising, cottage-style borders, and cut flowers
Fritillaria imperialis ‘Sunset’ is a wonderfully architectural crown imperial, prized for its glossy green foliage and a ring of burnished orange, bell-shaped flowers, finished with a jaunty tuft at the top. It brings a composed, statuesque note to spring borders and looks equally at home threaded through naturalistic planting.
Plant in autumn into fertile, well-drained soil in a sheltered position, and allow space for its upright, clump-forming habit. As the stems rise in spring, ‘Sunset’ provides height, colour and a confident vertical accent—particularly effective repeated in small groups.
- Botanical name: Fritillaria imperialis ‘Sunset’
- Common name: fritillary (crown imperial)
- Flower colour: Orange with green foliage
- Flowering: March–May
- Height: 50–100cm
- Bulb size: 24/26
Camassia quamash ‘Orion’ is a quietly striking choice for naturalistic planting, sending up poised spires of deep blue, star-shaped flowers above fresh green foliage. Flowering from May to June, it brings an effortless, meadow-like elegance to borders and lightly shaded edges—particularly where the soil holds a little moisture without becoming waterlogged.
Plant in autumn and allow it to settle; over time it will form handsome clumps and can seed around gently if left undisturbed, lending a relaxed, established feel that suits cottage gardens and contemporary meadow schemes alike.
Allium 'Aflatunense' (hollandicum) is a standout plant for borders, cottage gardens, cut flowers, naturalising, offering A stately ornamental allium for late spring, forming neat clumps of strap-like foliage topped by bold, spherical flowerheads on upright stems. An excellent choice for threading through tulips and cottage-garden perennials, and invaluable for adding height and structure to borders..
Best grown in full-sun, partial sun with moist but well-drained soil, it suits gardeners who want clear structure, dependable flowering, and easy planting plans.
Use it in borders, cottage gardens, cut flowers, naturalising and pair with complementary varieties to build a fuller seasonal display.
Camassia 'Cusickii' is a wonderfully refined naturaliser for those parts of the garden that hold a little moisture. In late spring it rises on upright stems with neat, starry flowers in a clear, azure-blue—an elegant way to thread height and colour through borders, meadow-style planting, and naturalised grass.
Plant in generous drifts for a quietly impressive display that returns each year, settling in steadily and looking increasingly at home as it matures.
- Colour & form: star-shaped, blue-purple flowers held in stately spires
- Where it shines: borders, naturalised grass, meadow-style schemes
- Garden value: pollinator friendly and reliably perennial
