đźšš Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Onyx Zebra Hydrangea

Product image 1
1 / 4

Onyx Zebra Hydrangea

A High-Contrast Hydrangea That Looks Designed From Day One

Onyx Zebra Hydrangea is all about contrast—glowing white mophead blooms held against near-black stems for a look that reads crisp, modern, and unforgettable. It’s the rare hydrangea that feels like a designer plant even in a simple bed: dark stems create instant structure, while lush green foliage makes those white flower heads pop from a distance. If you’re building a landscape around clean lines, dark mulch, evergreen backdrops, or a black-and-white palette, this variety plugs right in and elevates the whole scene.

The bloom display is classic mophead—full, rounded clusters that look lush and abundant. In many gardens, the flowers can open with a greenish cast and mature to bright white, creating a subtle “color movement” that keeps the plant interesting over weeks. It’s an ideal focal point near an entry, along a walkway, or in a courtyard bed where the dark stems can be appreciated up close.

Compact Size That Fits Foundations, Borders, And Patio Pots

This is a compact bigleaf hydrangea that stays garden-friendly—typically 3–4 ft tall and wide—so it works where larger hydrangeas overwhelm the space. Use it in foundation plantings without blocking windows, place it in the front of mixed shrub borders, or repeat it in a drift for a cohesive, intentional look. Because it doesn’t sprawl into a giant mound, it’s also a strong choice for smaller suburban beds and townhouse landscapes where every square foot matters.

Onyx Zebra is also a natural for containers. The black stems and white blooms look especially sharp in a big pot on a porch or patio, where you can control moisture and give it the light it likes. For best results in containers, think “roomy and stable”: a large container, consistent watering, and a spot with morning sun and afternoon shade will keep foliage and blooms looking fresh and finished.

Reliable Seasonal Color In Part Shade With Simple Care

Onyx Zebra performs best in part shade, especially in warmer climates where afternoon sun can stress bigleaf hydrangeas. Morning sun with afternoon shade is the sweet spot: enough light for good flowering, enough protection to keep leaves from scorching, and enough consistency to maintain that deep green foliage that makes the blooms shine. In cooler regions, it can tolerate more sun if you keep water consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat.

Moisture management is the secret to a “wow” hydrangea. Keep the root zone evenly moist (not soggy), mulch to stabilize temperature and reduce evaporation, and water deeply during dry spells—especially while the plant is setting buds and pushing blooms. Done right, you get a shrub that looks lush, blooms generously, and keeps that sharp black-stem contrast as a season-long feature, not just a novelty.

Pruning And Training That Preserve Blooms And Boost Performance

Bigleaf hydrangeas reward a gentle hand, and Onyx Zebra is no exception. The safest approach is minimal pruning: remove spent blooms, cut out dead or damaged stems, and do any shaping right after flowering so you don’t remove developing buds. This method keeps the shrub full, protects bloom potential, and helps maintain the strong framework that shows off the black stems.

If you need to reduce size, do it gradually over a couple of seasons rather than hard-cutting all at once. In colder climates, leave stems standing through winter to help protect buds, then tidy in spring once you can clearly see what’s alive. With this easy rhythm—consistent moisture, smart siting, and light pruning—you’ll get the clean, high-contrast hydrangea look shoppers want, without the trial-and-error that often comes with bigleaf types.

A High-Contrast Hydrangea That Looks Designed From Day One

Onyx Zebra Hydrangea is all about contrast—glowing white mophead blooms held against near-black stems for a look that reads crisp, modern, and unforgettable. It’s the rare hydrangea that feels like a designer plant even in a simple bed: dark stems create instant structure, while lush green foliage makes those white flower heads pop from a distance. If you’re building a landscape around clean lines, dark mulch, evergreen backdrops, or a black-and-white palette, this variety plugs right in and elevates the whole scene.

The bloom display is classic mophead—full, rounded clusters that look lush and abundant. In many gardens, the flowers can open with a greenish cast and mature to bright white, creating a subtle “color movement” that keeps the plant interesting over weeks. It’s an ideal focal point near an entry, along a walkway, or in a courtyard bed where the dark stems can be appreciated up close.

Compact Size That Fits Foundations, Borders, And Patio Pots

This is a compact bigleaf hydrangea that stays garden-friendly—typically 3–4 ft tall and wide—so it works where larger hydrangeas overwhelm the space. Use it in foundation plantings without blocking windows, place it in the front of mixed shrub borders, or repeat it in a drift for a cohesive, intentional look. Because it doesn’t sprawl into a giant mound, it’s also a strong choice for smaller suburban beds and townhouse landscapes where every square foot matters.

Onyx Zebra is also a natural for containers. The black stems and white blooms look especially sharp in a big pot on a porch or patio, where you can control moisture and give it the light it likes. For best results in containers, think “roomy and stable”: a large container, consistent watering, and a spot with morning sun and afternoon shade will keep foliage and blooms looking fresh and finished.

Reliable Seasonal Color In Part Shade With Simple Care

Onyx Zebra performs best in part shade, especially in warmer climates where afternoon sun can stress bigleaf hydrangeas. Morning sun with afternoon shade is the sweet spot: enough light for good flowering, enough protection to keep leaves from scorching, and enough consistency to maintain that deep green foliage that makes the blooms shine. In cooler regions, it can tolerate more sun if you keep water consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat.

Moisture management is the secret to a “wow” hydrangea. Keep the root zone evenly moist (not soggy), mulch to stabilize temperature and reduce evaporation, and water deeply during dry spells—especially while the plant is setting buds and pushing blooms. Done right, you get a shrub that looks lush, blooms generously, and keeps that sharp black-stem contrast as a season-long feature, not just a novelty.

Pruning And Training That Preserve Blooms And Boost Performance

Bigleaf hydrangeas reward a gentle hand, and Onyx Zebra is no exception. The safest approach is minimal pruning: remove spent blooms, cut out dead or damaged stems, and do any shaping right after flowering so you don’t remove developing buds. This method keeps the shrub full, protects bloom potential, and helps maintain the strong framework that shows off the black stems.

If you need to reduce size, do it gradually over a couple of seasons rather than hard-cutting all at once. In colder climates, leave stems standing through winter to help protect buds, then tidy in spring once you can clearly see what’s alive. With this easy rhythm—consistent moisture, smart siting, and light pruning—you’ll get the clean, high-contrast hydrangea look shoppers want, without the trial-and-error that often comes with bigleaf types.

$32.98

Original: $109.95

-70%
Onyx Zebra Hydrangea—

$109.95

$32.98

Description

A High-Contrast Hydrangea That Looks Designed From Day One

Onyx Zebra Hydrangea is all about contrast—glowing white mophead blooms held against near-black stems for a look that reads crisp, modern, and unforgettable. It’s the rare hydrangea that feels like a designer plant even in a simple bed: dark stems create instant structure, while lush green foliage makes those white flower heads pop from a distance. If you’re building a landscape around clean lines, dark mulch, evergreen backdrops, or a black-and-white palette, this variety plugs right in and elevates the whole scene.

The bloom display is classic mophead—full, rounded clusters that look lush and abundant. In many gardens, the flowers can open with a greenish cast and mature to bright white, creating a subtle “color movement” that keeps the plant interesting over weeks. It’s an ideal focal point near an entry, along a walkway, or in a courtyard bed where the dark stems can be appreciated up close.

Compact Size That Fits Foundations, Borders, And Patio Pots

This is a compact bigleaf hydrangea that stays garden-friendly—typically 3–4 ft tall and wide—so it works where larger hydrangeas overwhelm the space. Use it in foundation plantings without blocking windows, place it in the front of mixed shrub borders, or repeat it in a drift for a cohesive, intentional look. Because it doesn’t sprawl into a giant mound, it’s also a strong choice for smaller suburban beds and townhouse landscapes where every square foot matters.

Onyx Zebra is also a natural for containers. The black stems and white blooms look especially sharp in a big pot on a porch or patio, where you can control moisture and give it the light it likes. For best results in containers, think “roomy and stable”: a large container, consistent watering, and a spot with morning sun and afternoon shade will keep foliage and blooms looking fresh and finished.

Reliable Seasonal Color In Part Shade With Simple Care

Onyx Zebra performs best in part shade, especially in warmer climates where afternoon sun can stress bigleaf hydrangeas. Morning sun with afternoon shade is the sweet spot: enough light for good flowering, enough protection to keep leaves from scorching, and enough consistency to maintain that deep green foliage that makes the blooms shine. In cooler regions, it can tolerate more sun if you keep water consistent, but it still appreciates protection from harsh late-day heat.

Moisture management is the secret to a “wow” hydrangea. Keep the root zone evenly moist (not soggy), mulch to stabilize temperature and reduce evaporation, and water deeply during dry spells—especially while the plant is setting buds and pushing blooms. Done right, you get a shrub that looks lush, blooms generously, and keeps that sharp black-stem contrast as a season-long feature, not just a novelty.

Pruning And Training That Preserve Blooms And Boost Performance

Bigleaf hydrangeas reward a gentle hand, and Onyx Zebra is no exception. The safest approach is minimal pruning: remove spent blooms, cut out dead or damaged stems, and do any shaping right after flowering so you don’t remove developing buds. This method keeps the shrub full, protects bloom potential, and helps maintain the strong framework that shows off the black stems.

If you need to reduce size, do it gradually over a couple of seasons rather than hard-cutting all at once. In colder climates, leave stems standing through winter to help protect buds, then tidy in spring once you can clearly see what’s alive. With this easy rhythm—consistent moisture, smart siting, and light pruning—you’ll get the clean, high-contrast hydrangea look shoppers want, without the trial-and-error that often comes with bigleaf types.