Coleus: Colorful, Leafy and Luxurious


Coleus plants are eye-dazzlers and easy-going with impossibly colorful leaves. They’re magnificent on their own in a flower pot, and the flash of their foliage lights up a flower bed. Coleus (Coleus blumei) are tender tropical plants grown for their leaves, not for their flowers. The leaf patterns are distinctly on the wild side — spotted, splashed, and artistically edged in shades of color ranging from purple, yellow, pink, intense red, and luminous chartreuse. 
Coleus thrives in heat. For generations, rooted cuttings of fancy coleus plants were simply passed along from one gardener to another but the market opened up in recent years and the selection of coleus varieties is now bigger than ever. 
Gardeners have always found creative ways to use coleus. In the 19th century, Coleus were the stars of Victorian bedding schemes: one older garden book contains tantalizing references to coleus mosaics, including a profile of George Washington in coleus at the Boston Public Gardens.

Today coleus are more often found in flower pots. Jimmy Turner, director of the Dallas Arboretum, shows off coleus in pots of all kinds at the 66-acre display garden. He favors combinations that capture the beauty of a complex flower arrangement, but he also likes simple combinations of just two or three plants. Coleus work well in both situations: they don’t get lost in a mixed planting with dramatic elephant’s ears, castor beans, trailing sweet-potato vines, or towering canna lilies, and they’re sophisticated enough to pair gracefully with ferns, heucheras, or luminous blue scaevola. Turner adds coleus to pots with silver, purple, blue, and pink flowers, and also uses them as bright spotlights, plopping a pot full of luxurious, chartreuse-leafed coleus in a bed that needs a jolt of color.

Few plants are more indulgent of novice gardeners than coleus. Coleus thrives in part shade and need little more than regular watering to flourish all summer long. If the plants send up flower spikes, pinch them off — its the leaves you’re after, and they are show-stoppers.