Low light plants like astilbe make excellent porch plants for shade.
Best front porch plants for shade.
Sometimes you need to think outside of the box.
Glorioski do i love this plant.
If you have a shady yard or want to perk up a shaded spot in your home at your front door on your porch or around your patio put together a pretty shade loving container that s also easy to care for.
These plants are good choices for the inexperienced or lazy gardener.
Try flowering plants that are marked part sun.
Flowering plants will need at least a little bit of sunlight to bloom but many foliage plants enjoy their best color in low light.
Plant them at the container s edge in front of a tall spiky plant like purple millet.
Growing about three feet tall and wide this graceful evergreen boasts soft textured foliage reminiscent of bamboo that s great for combining with coarser plants like hydrangeas.
It thrives in part sun or shade in moist well drained soil.
Tuck a little moss around the base of the plant for a finished look.
Plants in containers require different care.
These gorgeous shade loving plants will transform your containers into an oasis for your patio porch or doorstep.
Here are a few tips.
A spot of color and life on your front porch can ease the winter doldrums.
It s hard to find flowering plants that do well in the shade.
Here are some of my favorite plants for a shady porch.
So dust off your gardening gear and pot up a couple cold hardy containers.
But a single hosta plant will grow quite well in a container and this plant thrives in the shade.
Here are my favorite shade plants for the front porch and below i ve made a short video with tips on planting.
Continue to 13 of 21 below.
Yes i know most people plant hosta in the ground where it comes back year after year.
Container plants are the ultimate in modular style infinitely adaptable depending on changing seasons and preferences.
Container porch plants for shade will still need regular water as pots dry out faster than in ground plants.
Even plants like hosta which are.
Plants like caladiums and creeping jenny will thrive in the shade and they ll also add great color and movement to your planters.
Put them on your front porch or patio for some green in your life.
If you re looking for a trailing plant to frame your front door whether you plan to hang it or let it trail upwards from a pot or a window box english ivy is a great.
Use colorful foliage instead of flowers.