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Dwarf Crested Iris

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Dwarf Crested Iris

A Petite Native Iris for Woodland Gardens.

Dwarf Crested Iris is a charming native perennial grown for its low spreading habit, spring flowers, and woodland garden appeal. This compact iris forms shallow rhizomes that slowly spread into attractive patches, making it useful as a flowering groundcover in part shade, shade borders, native plantings, and naturalized woodland spaces. It brings refined spring color to areas where taller iris varieties would feel out of scale.

Lavender-Blue Blooms with a Bright Crest.

In spring, Dwarf Crested Iris produces delicate lavender-blue to violet-blue flowers with a distinctive white patch and yellow-orange crest on the falls. The flowers sit just above the foliage, creating a close-up garden moment along pathways, woodland edges, and shaded rock gardens. Plant it in groups or drifts for the strongest floral display.

Low-Growing Texture for Shade and Edging.

The narrow, green foliage creates a low, fresh-looking mat after bloom and helps cover the soil throughout the growing season. Dwarf Crested Iris works well along shaded walkways, at the front of woodland borders, beneath deciduous shrubs, around stepping stones, and in naturalized plantings with ferns, carex, heuchera, tiarella, phlox, hellebores, and native groundcovers.

Native, Deer Resistant, and Easy to Naturalize.

Dwarf Crested Iris is native to the eastern United States and is a strong choice for gardeners looking to add native spring interest to shaded spaces. It is generally considered deer-resistant, making it useful where browsing pressure affects softer perennials. Once established in the right site, it spreads gently by rhizomes and can form cheerful woodland colonies.

Best in Cool, Moist, Well-Drained Soil.

Plant Dwarf Crested Iris in part shade to shade with humus-rich, moist, well-drained soil. It likes woodland conditions with spring moisture, organic matter, and protection from hot afternoon sun. Avoid wet, heavy soil that stays soggy and avoid dry, exposed sites. A light layer of leaf mold or compost helps mimic the forest-floor conditions this native iris prefers.

A Petite Native Iris for Woodland Gardens.

Dwarf Crested Iris is a charming native perennial grown for its low spreading habit, spring flowers, and woodland garden appeal. This compact iris forms shallow rhizomes that slowly spread into attractive patches, making it useful as a flowering groundcover in part shade, shade borders, native plantings, and naturalized woodland spaces. It brings refined spring color to areas where taller iris varieties would feel out of scale.

Lavender-Blue Blooms with a Bright Crest.

In spring, Dwarf Crested Iris produces delicate lavender-blue to violet-blue flowers with a distinctive white patch and yellow-orange crest on the falls. The flowers sit just above the foliage, creating a close-up garden moment along pathways, woodland edges, and shaded rock gardens. Plant it in groups or drifts for the strongest floral display.

Low-Growing Texture for Shade and Edging.

The narrow, green foliage creates a low, fresh-looking mat after bloom and helps cover the soil throughout the growing season. Dwarf Crested Iris works well along shaded walkways, at the front of woodland borders, beneath deciduous shrubs, around stepping stones, and in naturalized plantings with ferns, carex, heuchera, tiarella, phlox, hellebores, and native groundcovers.

Native, Deer Resistant, and Easy to Naturalize.

Dwarf Crested Iris is native to the eastern United States and is a strong choice for gardeners looking to add native spring interest to shaded spaces. It is generally considered deer-resistant, making it useful where browsing pressure affects softer perennials. Once established in the right site, it spreads gently by rhizomes and can form cheerful woodland colonies.

Best in Cool, Moist, Well-Drained Soil.

Plant Dwarf Crested Iris in part shade to shade with humus-rich, moist, well-drained soil. It likes woodland conditions with spring moisture, organic matter, and protection from hot afternoon sun. Avoid wet, heavy soil that stays soggy and avoid dry, exposed sites. A light layer of leaf mold or compost helps mimic the forest-floor conditions this native iris prefers.

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Dwarf Crested Iris

$19.95

$5.98

Description

A Petite Native Iris for Woodland Gardens.

Dwarf Crested Iris is a charming native perennial grown for its low spreading habit, spring flowers, and woodland garden appeal. This compact iris forms shallow rhizomes that slowly spread into attractive patches, making it useful as a flowering groundcover in part shade, shade borders, native plantings, and naturalized woodland spaces. It brings refined spring color to areas where taller iris varieties would feel out of scale.

Lavender-Blue Blooms with a Bright Crest.

In spring, Dwarf Crested Iris produces delicate lavender-blue to violet-blue flowers with a distinctive white patch and yellow-orange crest on the falls. The flowers sit just above the foliage, creating a close-up garden moment along pathways, woodland edges, and shaded rock gardens. Plant it in groups or drifts for the strongest floral display.

Low-Growing Texture for Shade and Edging.

The narrow, green foliage creates a low, fresh-looking mat after bloom and helps cover the soil throughout the growing season. Dwarf Crested Iris works well along shaded walkways, at the front of woodland borders, beneath deciduous shrubs, around stepping stones, and in naturalized plantings with ferns, carex, heuchera, tiarella, phlox, hellebores, and native groundcovers.

Native, Deer Resistant, and Easy to Naturalize.

Dwarf Crested Iris is native to the eastern United States and is a strong choice for gardeners looking to add native spring interest to shaded spaces. It is generally considered deer-resistant, making it useful where browsing pressure affects softer perennials. Once established in the right site, it spreads gently by rhizomes and can form cheerful woodland colonies.

Best in Cool, Moist, Well-Drained Soil.

Plant Dwarf Crested Iris in part shade to shade with humus-rich, moist, well-drained soil. It likes woodland conditions with spring moisture, organic matter, and protection from hot afternoon sun. Avoid wet, heavy soil that stays soggy and avoid dry, exposed sites. A light layer of leaf mold or compost helps mimic the forest-floor conditions this native iris prefers.