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Jessie Keith
(Dianthus, Old Spice Dianthus)
The favorite, old-fashioned ‘Old Spice’ has charming, extremely fragrant, salmon to coral-pink flowers. This hybrid perennial has a pretty cottage garden look and is easy to grow if given the right conditions.
Like most pinks, ‘Old Spice’ offers mounds of silvery blue, linear leaves that are evergreen. From late spring into midsummer, its branched, upright stems carry fragrant, fully double blossoms of salmon to coral-pink with jagged edges. The blooms look like small carnations and are great...
PlantHaven
(Dianthus, Stardust Dianthus)
The genus Dianthus comprises approximately 300 species and more than 27,000 cultivars. Collectively known as “pinks”, these showy flowering plants have been grown for many hundreds of years. Their common name was given for the sharply-toothed petal tips of their flowers, which look like they were cut by pinking shears.
Nearly all Dianthus species hail from Eurasia and northern Africa, while only one originates from North America. Most are herbaceous tender perennials; however...
James H. Schutte
(Dianthus, Pike's Pink Dianthus)
The small, numerous flowers of ‘Pikes Pink’ are fully double, soft pink and sweetly fragrant. This low, spreading perennial is easy to grow if given the right growing conditions and ideal for sunny rock gardens and border edges.
This charming evergreen perennial forms a low, spreading mound of linear, almost grassy gray-green foliage. In late spring to early summer it becomes covered with a carpet of double pink flowers. Each gem of a bloom has sharply pinked petal edges and stands erect on...
Yoder Brothers
(Dianthus, Pinks, Pixie Star Dianthus)
Worthy of top billing in just about any perennial border, Star Series dianthus draw attention and applause with their multicolored, fragrant flowers displayed against compact mounds of handsome blue-green foliage. The cultivar 'Pixie Star' has fringed, vivid pink, single flowers with a magenta eye ring. Flowering begins and is heaviest in late spring but may continue sporadically through summer if spent blooms are removed.
Like most pinks, Star Series dianthus like sun and well-drained, slightly...
Jessie Keith
(Hybrid Sweet William)
The genus Dianthus comprises approximately 300 species and more than 27,000 cultivars. Collectively known as “pinks”, these showy flowering plants have been grown for many hundreds of years. Their common name was given for the sharply-toothed petal tips of their flowers, which look like they were cut by pinking shears.
Nearly all Dianthus species hail from Eurasia and northern Africa, while only one originates from North America. Most are herbaceous tender perennials; however...
Jessie Keith
(Dianthus, Pinks, Raspberry Parfait Pink)
China pink ‘Raspberry Parfait’ creates a show-stopping display with its striking raspberry red and light pink flowers which resemble small bullseyes. A member of the Super Parfait Series, it forms a rounded mound of linear, somewhat grass-like, blue-green foliage. Numerous single, lightly fragrant flowers appear on short, sturdy stems from late spring through midsummer. Each flower is light pink with petals edged in dark pink, and bears a distinct, central “eye” of raspberry red.
Valued...
Yoder Brothers
(Cheddar Pinks, Eastern Star Dianthus)
The Star Series dianthus are hybrid perennials selected for their dwarf mounded habit, blue-green leaves, and brilliantly colored, fragrant flowers. The cultivar 'Red Dwarf' bears raspberry-rose flowers with maroon eyes from late spring to early summer (and longer if deadheaded). 'Red Dwarf' likes sun and well-drained, slightly alkaline soil. It works well in the rock garden or at the front of the sunny border.
Blooms of Bressingham
(Dianthus, Rosish One Dianthus)
Hybrid border pink ‘Rosish One’ bears fragrant, double flowers whose rosy-magenta petals are crisply edged with white. They appear from late spring through midsummer atop compact, spreading mounds of linear, grasslike, silvery green foliage. The colorful blossoms are held singly on sturdy, upright stems, and are attractive to bees and butterflies.
Grow this charming small perennial in full to part sun and fertile, well-drained, neutral to alkaline soil. Offering good drought resistance,...
(Dianthus, Pinks, Snowfire Pink)
Winner of the All-America Selections award in 1978, China pink ‘Snowfire’ produces drifts of large, single white flowers with bright, rose-red centers. The lightly fragrant blossoms appear from late spring throughout summer atop compact mounds of linear, grasslike, green foliage. They are held singly on short, sturdy stems, and are attractive to bees and butterflies.
Valued for their colorful, prolific flowers, China pinks are short-lived perennials which are commonly treated as annuals. Plant...
Yoder Brothers
(Cheddar Pinks, Spangled Star Cheddar Pinks)
The Star Series dianthus are hybrid perennials selected for their dwarf, mounded habit, blue-green leaves, and brilliantly colored, clove-scented flowers. The cultivar 'Spangled Star' bears fragrant, fringed, scarlet flowers with bright pink blotches and margins from late spring through summer (if deadheaded). Plant in full sun and well-drained, slightly alkaline soil. 'Spangled Star' works well in the rock garden or at the front of the sunny border.