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Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush

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Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush

A Dwarf Butterfly Bush With Big Seasonal Color

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush gives homeowners the pollinator appeal of a butterfly bush in a much more manageable size. This compact cultivar produces bright pink to fuchsia-pink flower spikes above soft silver-green to gray-green foliage, creating a lively summer look without taking over the bed. The bloom color is cheerful and saturated, making it especially useful in sunny borders, entry plantings, and patio containers where smaller shrubs need to work hard visually. Instead of disappearing in the landscape, this one brings a bright, energetic presence from the warm season well into fall.

It also blooms for an impressively long stretch. Sources describe flowering from late spring or early summer into early fall, often continuing until frost when spent blooms are clipped. That long season gives homeowners a compact shrub that keeps producing color after many spring shrubs have finished, helping smaller gardens stay active for much longer. For gardeners who want a smaller flowering shrub that still performs like a major summer feature, this cultivar checks that box.

Perfect for Small Gardens, Borders, and Containers

One of the biggest strengths of Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is scale. It typically matures at about 24 to 30 inches tall and wide, which makes it dramatically easier to place than older standard butterfly bushes that can become large, rangy shrubs. This smaller size makes it ideal for narrow beds, townhouse gardens, mixed perennial borders, and foundation plantings where a full-size butterfly bush would quickly feel oversized. It also makes the plant a much more realistic option for decorative containers on porches, patios, and sunny terraces.

Its habit is dense and compact rather than loose and sprawling, so it blends well with coneflowers, salvias, rudbeckias, lantana, and other sun-loving perennials. You can use it in repeating drifts through a pollinator border, as a low-flowering accent in front of taller shrubs, or as a container centerpiece with trailing companions along the edge. That flexibility is a major selling point for homeowners who want a shrub with flower power but do not want to redesign the whole bed around one vigorous plant.

Pollinator Appeal Without the Oversized Habit

Like other butterfly bushes, Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is highly attractive to butterflies and hummingbirds, making it a strong choice for gardeners trying to create a more active pollinator-friendly landscape. The fragrant flower spikes bring movement and color at exactly the time of year when many pollinator gardens are building momentum. In a small space, that kind of wildlife value matters even more because every plant has to earn its place.

Another important advantage is that the Flutterby series has been bred to be sterile and non-seeding, which helps distinguish it from older Buddleja davidii types that are known for reseeding. For homeowners who love butterfly bush but want a cultivar bred for better garden behavior, this is a meaningful benefit. It lets the plant deliver bloom and pollinator value while fitting more comfortably into modern small-space landscapes and container displays.

Easy-Care Performance in Full Sun

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti performs best in full sun and well-drained soil. Once established, it is heat-tolerant and drought-tolerant, though container-grown plants will naturally need more regular watering than those planted in the ground. It is also described as deer and rabbit-resistant, which adds to its usefulness in landscapes where browsing pressure is a concern. Like many butterfly bushes, top growth may die back in colder climates and regrow from the roots in spring.

Pruning is straightforward because butterfly bush flowers on new growth. The best time to cut it back is early to mid-spring, which encourages fresh stems and strong flowering in the same season. Deadheading spent blooms can help extend flowering even longer. For homeowners who want a compact flowering shrub with strong summer color, pollinator appeal, and easier placement than traditional butterfly bush, this cultivar offers a very practical solution.

A Dwarf Butterfly Bush With Big Seasonal Color

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush gives homeowners the pollinator appeal of a butterfly bush in a much more manageable size. This compact cultivar produces bright pink to fuchsia-pink flower spikes above soft silver-green to gray-green foliage, creating a lively summer look without taking over the bed. The bloom color is cheerful and saturated, making it especially useful in sunny borders, entry plantings, and patio containers where smaller shrubs need to work hard visually. Instead of disappearing in the landscape, this one brings a bright, energetic presence from the warm season well into fall.

It also blooms for an impressively long stretch. Sources describe flowering from late spring or early summer into early fall, often continuing until frost when spent blooms are clipped. That long season gives homeowners a compact shrub that keeps producing color after many spring shrubs have finished, helping smaller gardens stay active for much longer. For gardeners who want a smaller flowering shrub that still performs like a major summer feature, this cultivar checks that box.

Perfect for Small Gardens, Borders, and Containers

One of the biggest strengths of Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is scale. It typically matures at about 24 to 30 inches tall and wide, which makes it dramatically easier to place than older standard butterfly bushes that can become large, rangy shrubs. This smaller size makes it ideal for narrow beds, townhouse gardens, mixed perennial borders, and foundation plantings where a full-size butterfly bush would quickly feel oversized. It also makes the plant a much more realistic option for decorative containers on porches, patios, and sunny terraces.

Its habit is dense and compact rather than loose and sprawling, so it blends well with coneflowers, salvias, rudbeckias, lantana, and other sun-loving perennials. You can use it in repeating drifts through a pollinator border, as a low-flowering accent in front of taller shrubs, or as a container centerpiece with trailing companions along the edge. That flexibility is a major selling point for homeowners who want a shrub with flower power but do not want to redesign the whole bed around one vigorous plant.

Pollinator Appeal Without the Oversized Habit

Like other butterfly bushes, Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is highly attractive to butterflies and hummingbirds, making it a strong choice for gardeners trying to create a more active pollinator-friendly landscape. The fragrant flower spikes bring movement and color at exactly the time of year when many pollinator gardens are building momentum. In a small space, that kind of wildlife value matters even more because every plant has to earn its place.

Another important advantage is that the Flutterby series has been bred to be sterile and non-seeding, which helps distinguish it from older Buddleja davidii types that are known for reseeding. For homeowners who love butterfly bush but want a cultivar bred for better garden behavior, this is a meaningful benefit. It lets the plant deliver bloom and pollinator value while fitting more comfortably into modern small-space landscapes and container displays.

Easy-Care Performance in Full Sun

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti performs best in full sun and well-drained soil. Once established, it is heat-tolerant and drought-tolerant, though container-grown plants will naturally need more regular watering than those planted in the ground. It is also described as deer and rabbit-resistant, which adds to its usefulness in landscapes where browsing pressure is a concern. Like many butterfly bushes, top growth may die back in colder climates and regrow from the roots in spring.

Pruning is straightforward because butterfly bush flowers on new growth. The best time to cut it back is early to mid-spring, which encourages fresh stems and strong flowering in the same season. Deadheading spent blooms can help extend flowering even longer. For homeowners who want a compact flowering shrub with strong summer color, pollinator appeal, and easier placement than traditional butterfly bush, this cultivar offers a very practical solution.

$79.95
Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush
$79.95

Description

A Dwarf Butterfly Bush With Big Seasonal Color

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti Butterfly Bush gives homeowners the pollinator appeal of a butterfly bush in a much more manageable size. This compact cultivar produces bright pink to fuchsia-pink flower spikes above soft silver-green to gray-green foliage, creating a lively summer look without taking over the bed. The bloom color is cheerful and saturated, making it especially useful in sunny borders, entry plantings, and patio containers where smaller shrubs need to work hard visually. Instead of disappearing in the landscape, this one brings a bright, energetic presence from the warm season well into fall.

It also blooms for an impressively long stretch. Sources describe flowering from late spring or early summer into early fall, often continuing until frost when spent blooms are clipped. That long season gives homeowners a compact shrub that keeps producing color after many spring shrubs have finished, helping smaller gardens stay active for much longer. For gardeners who want a smaller flowering shrub that still performs like a major summer feature, this cultivar checks that box.

Perfect for Small Gardens, Borders, and Containers

One of the biggest strengths of Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is scale. It typically matures at about 24 to 30 inches tall and wide, which makes it dramatically easier to place than older standard butterfly bushes that can become large, rangy shrubs. This smaller size makes it ideal for narrow beds, townhouse gardens, mixed perennial borders, and foundation plantings where a full-size butterfly bush would quickly feel oversized. It also makes the plant a much more realistic option for decorative containers on porches, patios, and sunny terraces.

Its habit is dense and compact rather than loose and sprawling, so it blends well with coneflowers, salvias, rudbeckias, lantana, and other sun-loving perennials. You can use it in repeating drifts through a pollinator border, as a low-flowering accent in front of taller shrubs, or as a container centerpiece with trailing companions along the edge. That flexibility is a major selling point for homeowners who want a shrub with flower power but do not want to redesign the whole bed around one vigorous plant.

Pollinator Appeal Without the Oversized Habit

Like other butterfly bushes, Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti is highly attractive to butterflies and hummingbirds, making it a strong choice for gardeners trying to create a more active pollinator-friendly landscape. The fragrant flower spikes bring movement and color at exactly the time of year when many pollinator gardens are building momentum. In a small space, that kind of wildlife value matters even more because every plant has to earn its place.

Another important advantage is that the Flutterby series has been bred to be sterile and non-seeding, which helps distinguish it from older Buddleja davidii types that are known for reseeding. For homeowners who love butterfly bush but want a cultivar bred for better garden behavior, this is a meaningful benefit. It lets the plant deliver bloom and pollinator value while fitting more comfortably into modern small-space landscapes and container displays.

Easy-Care Performance in Full Sun

Flutterby Petite® Tutti Fruitti performs best in full sun and well-drained soil. Once established, it is heat-tolerant and drought-tolerant, though container-grown plants will naturally need more regular watering than those planted in the ground. It is also described as deer and rabbit-resistant, which adds to its usefulness in landscapes where browsing pressure is a concern. Like many butterfly bushes, top growth may die back in colder climates and regrow from the roots in spring.

Pruning is straightforward because butterfly bush flowers on new growth. The best time to cut it back is early to mid-spring, which encourages fresh stems and strong flowering in the same season. Deadheading spent blooms can help extend flowering even longer. For homeowners who want a compact flowering shrub with strong summer color, pollinator appeal, and easier placement than traditional butterfly bush, this cultivar offers a very practical solution.