
Purple Dragon Lamium
Bold Purple Flowers for Shaded Garden Beds
Purple Dragon Lamium is a low-growing perennial groundcover grown for its deep purple flowers, bright silver foliage, and easy spreading habit. Also known as Purple Dragon Spotted Deadnettle, this shade-loving perennial brings a brighter, more colorful look to areas where many flowering plants struggle.
In spring, clusters of deep purple hooded flowers rise just above the foliage, creating a strong color contrast against the silver leaves. The flowers can continue lightly or rebloom in favorable conditions, giving Purple Dragon more seasonal interest than a plain foliage groundcover.
Silver Foliage That Brightens Shade
The silver foliage is one of Purple Dragon Lamium’s biggest advantages. The leaves create a light-reflecting carpet that brightens shaded borders, under-tree plantings, woodland edges, foundation beds, and darker corners of the garden.
Because the foliage remains attractive beyond the main bloom period, Purple Dragon works hard even when it is not flowering. Use it to soften the front of a shade border, fill gaps between larger perennials, or add contrast beneath shrubs and small ornamental trees.
A Low Groundcover for Shade, Edging, and Containers
Purple Dragon Lamium stays low and spreads outward, making it useful as a groundcover, border edging, pathway softener, container spiller, or filler between hostas, ferns, hellebores, heuchera, brunnera, and astilbe. Its spreading stems help cover bare soil and reduce weed pressure in shaded areas.
This plant is especially useful under shrubs, beneath small trees, along shaded walkways, and in containers where silver foliage can spill gently over the edge. It is best for ornamental coverage rather than heavy foot traffic.
Deer Resistant, Rabbit Resistant, and Low Maintenance
Purple Dragon Lamium is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical choice for gardens where browsing pressure is a concern. While no plant is completely deer-proof, Lamium is often less attractive than many softer, tender shade perennials.
Once established, it is easy to maintain. Trim it back as needed to control spread, refresh tired foliage, or keep bed edges neat. This makes Purple Dragon a strong choice for gardeners who want shade coverage without constant upkeep.
Easy Care in Part Shade to Full Shade
Plant Purple Dragon Lamium in part shade to full shade with moist, well-drained soil. It can tolerate some dry shade once established, but it looks best with consistent moisture and good drainage. Avoid compacted, soggy, or poorly drained soil, especially in winter.
Water regularly after planting until roots establish. Fertilizer is rarely needed in average garden soil. If plants become thin, leggy, or tired-looking after bloom, shear lightly to encourage fresh foliage and a denser mat.
Bold Purple Flowers for Shaded Garden Beds
Purple Dragon Lamium is a low-growing perennial groundcover grown for its deep purple flowers, bright silver foliage, and easy spreading habit. Also known as Purple Dragon Spotted Deadnettle, this shade-loving perennial brings a brighter, more colorful look to areas where many flowering plants struggle.
In spring, clusters of deep purple hooded flowers rise just above the foliage, creating a strong color contrast against the silver leaves. The flowers can continue lightly or rebloom in favorable conditions, giving Purple Dragon more seasonal interest than a plain foliage groundcover.
Silver Foliage That Brightens Shade
The silver foliage is one of Purple Dragon Lamium’s biggest advantages. The leaves create a light-reflecting carpet that brightens shaded borders, under-tree plantings, woodland edges, foundation beds, and darker corners of the garden.
Because the foliage remains attractive beyond the main bloom period, Purple Dragon works hard even when it is not flowering. Use it to soften the front of a shade border, fill gaps between larger perennials, or add contrast beneath shrubs and small ornamental trees.
A Low Groundcover for Shade, Edging, and Containers
Purple Dragon Lamium stays low and spreads outward, making it useful as a groundcover, border edging, pathway softener, container spiller, or filler between hostas, ferns, hellebores, heuchera, brunnera, and astilbe. Its spreading stems help cover bare soil and reduce weed pressure in shaded areas.
This plant is especially useful under shrubs, beneath small trees, along shaded walkways, and in containers where silver foliage can spill gently over the edge. It is best for ornamental coverage rather than heavy foot traffic.
Deer Resistant, Rabbit Resistant, and Low Maintenance
Purple Dragon Lamium is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical choice for gardens where browsing pressure is a concern. While no plant is completely deer-proof, Lamium is often less attractive than many softer, tender shade perennials.
Once established, it is easy to maintain. Trim it back as needed to control spread, refresh tired foliage, or keep bed edges neat. This makes Purple Dragon a strong choice for gardeners who want shade coverage without constant upkeep.
Easy Care in Part Shade to Full Shade
Plant Purple Dragon Lamium in part shade to full shade with moist, well-drained soil. It can tolerate some dry shade once established, but it looks best with consistent moisture and good drainage. Avoid compacted, soggy, or poorly drained soil, especially in winter.
Water regularly after planting until roots establish. Fertilizer is rarely needed in average garden soil. If plants become thin, leggy, or tired-looking after bloom, shear lightly to encourage fresh foliage and a denser mat.
Description
Bold Purple Flowers for Shaded Garden Beds
Purple Dragon Lamium is a low-growing perennial groundcover grown for its deep purple flowers, bright silver foliage, and easy spreading habit. Also known as Purple Dragon Spotted Deadnettle, this shade-loving perennial brings a brighter, more colorful look to areas where many flowering plants struggle.
In spring, clusters of deep purple hooded flowers rise just above the foliage, creating a strong color contrast against the silver leaves. The flowers can continue lightly or rebloom in favorable conditions, giving Purple Dragon more seasonal interest than a plain foliage groundcover.
Silver Foliage That Brightens Shade
The silver foliage is one of Purple Dragon Lamium’s biggest advantages. The leaves create a light-reflecting carpet that brightens shaded borders, under-tree plantings, woodland edges, foundation beds, and darker corners of the garden.
Because the foliage remains attractive beyond the main bloom period, Purple Dragon works hard even when it is not flowering. Use it to soften the front of a shade border, fill gaps between larger perennials, or add contrast beneath shrubs and small ornamental trees.
A Low Groundcover for Shade, Edging, and Containers
Purple Dragon Lamium stays low and spreads outward, making it useful as a groundcover, border edging, pathway softener, container spiller, or filler between hostas, ferns, hellebores, heuchera, brunnera, and astilbe. Its spreading stems help cover bare soil and reduce weed pressure in shaded areas.
This plant is especially useful under shrubs, beneath small trees, along shaded walkways, and in containers where silver foliage can spill gently over the edge. It is best for ornamental coverage rather than heavy foot traffic.
Deer Resistant, Rabbit Resistant, and Low Maintenance
Purple Dragon Lamium is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical choice for gardens where browsing pressure is a concern. While no plant is completely deer-proof, Lamium is often less attractive than many softer, tender shade perennials.
Once established, it is easy to maintain. Trim it back as needed to control spread, refresh tired foliage, or keep bed edges neat. This makes Purple Dragon a strong choice for gardeners who want shade coverage without constant upkeep.
Easy Care in Part Shade to Full Shade
Plant Purple Dragon Lamium in part shade to full shade with moist, well-drained soil. It can tolerate some dry shade once established, but it looks best with consistent moisture and good drainage. Avoid compacted, soggy, or poorly drained soil, especially in winter.
Water regularly after planting until roots establish. Fertilizer is rarely needed in average garden soil. If plants become thin, leggy, or tired-looking after bloom, shear lightly to encourage fresh foliage and a denser mat.
























