
Gracillimus Miscanthus
Graceful Arching Foliage with Fine Texture
Gracillimus Miscanthus is one of the most classic maiden grasses for adding height, movement, and fine texture to sunny landscapes. Botanically known as Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracillimus’, this warm-season ornamental grass forms a graceful fountain of narrow green leaves with bright white midribs.
The foliage has a softer, more refined look than many larger ornamental grasses, while still giving the garden strong structure. Use Gracillimus where you want height and movement without a stiff or heavy appearance, such as sunny borders, foundation beds, property lines, large perennial gardens, and naturalistic plantings.
Late-Season Plumes for Fall and Winter Interest
In late summer to fall, Gracillimus Miscanthus can produce silky flower plumes that emerge with purple, copper, or reddish tones before aging to silvery white. The plumes rise above the foliage, adding height, softness, and movement to the late-season garden.
Flowering can vary by climate and growing season, especially in cooler regions where blooms may be later or less consistent. Even when plume production is lighter, the fine-textured foliage and fall color make Gracillimus valuable as a long-season landscape plant.
A Taller Grass for Screens, Backdrops, and Specimens
Gracillimus is taller than compact maiden grasses like Adagio, commonly reaching 4–7 feet tall with a mature spread of about 3–5 feet. This size makes it useful as a specimen grass, a soft privacy screen, a back-of-border accent, or a repeating vertical element.
Plant it where the mature clump has room to arch naturally. Gracillimus pairs well with coneflowers, black-eyed Susan, sedum, Russian sage, catmint, salvia, asters, hardy hibiscus, switchgrass, little bluestem, and compact evergreens.
Fall Color and Winter Structure
The narrow foliage often shifts to yellow, gold, tan, or bronze tones in fall before drying for winter. Left standing, the dried clump and plumes provide movement, texture, and structure after frost.
This winter presence is one of the main reasons gardeners love Miscanthus. Gracillimus helps sunny beds look intentional beyond the main bloom season, then starts fresh again after a late-winter or early-spring cutback.
Low Maintenance, Sun Loving, and Deer Resistant
Plant Gracillimus Miscanthus in full sun for the strongest habit and best plume production. It adapts to average, well-drained soil and becomes drought-tolerant once established, although consistent moisture during the first season helps it root in properly.
Gracillimus is generally considered deer-resistant and low-maintenance. Cut the clump back in late winter or early spring before new growth begins. Because Miscanthus can reseed or be restricted in some regions, check local guidance before planting, especially near natural areas.
Graceful Arching Foliage with Fine Texture
Gracillimus Miscanthus is one of the most classic maiden grasses for adding height, movement, and fine texture to sunny landscapes. Botanically known as Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracillimus’, this warm-season ornamental grass forms a graceful fountain of narrow green leaves with bright white midribs.
The foliage has a softer, more refined look than many larger ornamental grasses, while still giving the garden strong structure. Use Gracillimus where you want height and movement without a stiff or heavy appearance, such as sunny borders, foundation beds, property lines, large perennial gardens, and naturalistic plantings.
Late-Season Plumes for Fall and Winter Interest
In late summer to fall, Gracillimus Miscanthus can produce silky flower plumes that emerge with purple, copper, or reddish tones before aging to silvery white. The plumes rise above the foliage, adding height, softness, and movement to the late-season garden.
Flowering can vary by climate and growing season, especially in cooler regions where blooms may be later or less consistent. Even when plume production is lighter, the fine-textured foliage and fall color make Gracillimus valuable as a long-season landscape plant.
A Taller Grass for Screens, Backdrops, and Specimens
Gracillimus is taller than compact maiden grasses like Adagio, commonly reaching 4–7 feet tall with a mature spread of about 3–5 feet. This size makes it useful as a specimen grass, a soft privacy screen, a back-of-border accent, or a repeating vertical element.
Plant it where the mature clump has room to arch naturally. Gracillimus pairs well with coneflowers, black-eyed Susan, sedum, Russian sage, catmint, salvia, asters, hardy hibiscus, switchgrass, little bluestem, and compact evergreens.
Fall Color and Winter Structure
The narrow foliage often shifts to yellow, gold, tan, or bronze tones in fall before drying for winter. Left standing, the dried clump and plumes provide movement, texture, and structure after frost.
This winter presence is one of the main reasons gardeners love Miscanthus. Gracillimus helps sunny beds look intentional beyond the main bloom season, then starts fresh again after a late-winter or early-spring cutback.
Low Maintenance, Sun Loving, and Deer Resistant
Plant Gracillimus Miscanthus in full sun for the strongest habit and best plume production. It adapts to average, well-drained soil and becomes drought-tolerant once established, although consistent moisture during the first season helps it root in properly.
Gracillimus is generally considered deer-resistant and low-maintenance. Cut the clump back in late winter or early spring before new growth begins. Because Miscanthus can reseed or be restricted in some regions, check local guidance before planting, especially near natural areas.
Original: $28.95
-70%$28.95
$8.68Description
Graceful Arching Foliage with Fine Texture
Gracillimus Miscanthus is one of the most classic maiden grasses for adding height, movement, and fine texture to sunny landscapes. Botanically known as Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracillimus’, this warm-season ornamental grass forms a graceful fountain of narrow green leaves with bright white midribs.
The foliage has a softer, more refined look than many larger ornamental grasses, while still giving the garden strong structure. Use Gracillimus where you want height and movement without a stiff or heavy appearance, such as sunny borders, foundation beds, property lines, large perennial gardens, and naturalistic plantings.
Late-Season Plumes for Fall and Winter Interest
In late summer to fall, Gracillimus Miscanthus can produce silky flower plumes that emerge with purple, copper, or reddish tones before aging to silvery white. The plumes rise above the foliage, adding height, softness, and movement to the late-season garden.
Flowering can vary by climate and growing season, especially in cooler regions where blooms may be later or less consistent. Even when plume production is lighter, the fine-textured foliage and fall color make Gracillimus valuable as a long-season landscape plant.
A Taller Grass for Screens, Backdrops, and Specimens
Gracillimus is taller than compact maiden grasses like Adagio, commonly reaching 4–7 feet tall with a mature spread of about 3–5 feet. This size makes it useful as a specimen grass, a soft privacy screen, a back-of-border accent, or a repeating vertical element.
Plant it where the mature clump has room to arch naturally. Gracillimus pairs well with coneflowers, black-eyed Susan, sedum, Russian sage, catmint, salvia, asters, hardy hibiscus, switchgrass, little bluestem, and compact evergreens.
Fall Color and Winter Structure
The narrow foliage often shifts to yellow, gold, tan, or bronze tones in fall before drying for winter. Left standing, the dried clump and plumes provide movement, texture, and structure after frost.
This winter presence is one of the main reasons gardeners love Miscanthus. Gracillimus helps sunny beds look intentional beyond the main bloom season, then starts fresh again after a late-winter or early-spring cutback.
Low Maintenance, Sun Loving, and Deer Resistant
Plant Gracillimus Miscanthus in full sun for the strongest habit and best plume production. It adapts to average, well-drained soil and becomes drought-tolerant once established, although consistent moisture during the first season helps it root in properly.
Gracillimus is generally considered deer-resistant and low-maintenance. Cut the clump back in late winter or early spring before new growth begins. Because Miscanthus can reseed or be restricted in some regions, check local guidance before planting, especially near natural areas.
























