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20 Naturally Green Flowers: Complete With Names and Pictures

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20 naturally green flowers

Yes, These Verdant Green Flowers are the Real Thing!

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Yes, there are flowers that are naturally green! While green blooms aren鈥檛 all that rare, it鈥檚 less common for folks to know about them. From Irish green to modern chartreuse, green comes in a surprising variety of colors. We鈥檝e also included a bunch of native plants. Add a bit of interest to a flower bed or pop to a bouquet!

We鈥檙e all used to oranges and pinks, but a couple of stems of 鈥楨merald Tassels鈥 amaranthus in a flower arrangement steal the show. A vase of 鈥楪reen Halo鈥 peonies isn鈥檛 something you鈥檒l see at the grocery store flower cooler.

Most green flowers aren鈥檛 the same color as foliage, and they are often mixed with other colors. Also, we鈥檙e talking about natural green flowers, not cut flowers dyed to be 鈥済reened鈥 afterward. Beware the pictures online advertising a green dahlia (they don鈥檛 exist) or a green snapdragon. If they aren鈥檛 fake images, they were probably dyed. 

Green Blooming Annuals and Perennials

Green flowers can be enjoyed in many ways. Some add texture or contrast to a bouquet. The shades of green provide contrast to red and more vibrant colors, and they help each other pop.

Other green flowers are just unusual and breathtakingly beautiful alone (check out those zinnias!), adding modern allure. Yet others do heavy work, adding beneficial pollinators and nature鈥檚 verdant lushness.

If this short list inspires you to search for other green flowers online, search for 鈥済reen _____ varieties鈥 instead of just green tulips or green flowers. You鈥檒l get better results. 

Amaranthus

Fantastic lime green color and texture for fresh bouquets, large containers, or hanging baskets. Credit:

The long, trailing blooms of 鈥楨merald Tassels鈥 remind me of a cat鈥檚 tail鈥攅xcept they don鈥檛 twitch when I walk by. They add fantastic color and texture as cut flowers (for larger bouquets) and containers. When dried, the blooms turn from green to a light tan color, which looks lovely in fall arrangements. Learn more about growing amaranth flowers.

  • Full sun
  • Annual
  • Summer blooming
  • Start indoors and transplant
  • Up to 5 feet tall

Sweet William (Dianthus) 鈥楪reen Ball鈥

green Dianthus
This green Dianthus adds a fun and fuzzy texture to a bouquet!  Credit: Shutterstock. 

You鈥檝e likely never seen a Dianthus like this one. Blooms look like fuzzy green balls, and they are super green! The 3-inch lime green globes sit atop stiff, erect stems on a short plant. Perfect as a conversation piece during your garden tours!

  • Usually grown as an annual
  • 1鈥2 feet tall
  • Full or partial sun
  • Transplant

Dill

Dill inflorescences
Dill inflorescences in drops of morning dew during flowering. Credit: Stepanych

We all know about the herb dill, but you may not have thought about using it as a flower. The chartreuse flowers add extra structure to a cottage garden and are great fun in a bouquet, too. And, when you have too many dill heads, they鈥檙e fun for arts and crafts. 

  • Annual
  • 3鈥5 feet tall
  • Full sun
  • Direct seed or start indoors

False Queen Anne鈥檚 Lace

 False Queen Anne's Lace
Closeup of the False Queen Anne鈥檚 Lace 鈥楪reen Mist鈥 flower. Credit: K. Azhar Junos

鈥楪reen Mist鈥 is the variety, and double check the botanical name, Ammi visnaga, to ensure you鈥檙e getting the right plant. With dill-like foliage and large flower heads, this pale green blooming plant attracts many beneficial insects like lacewings, lady beetles, and parasitic wasps. If you鈥檙e trying to do some natural pest control, growing these flowers is a good start to creating a habitat for the good bugs in your garden.

  • Annual
  • 3鈥5 feet tall
  • Does best in full sun
  • Direct seed and succession plant

Bupleurum

鈥楪reen Gold鈥 Bupleurum is also known as Hare鈥檚 ear, although it doesn鈥檛 look like any rabbit or hare ear I鈥檝e ever seen. It bears a striking lime-green flower and pretty green leaves that are perfect for filler in bouquets. Tolerates a wide variety of soil types and pH as long as there鈥檚 good drainage. .

  • Annual
  • Full sun
  • 1鈥2 feet tall
  • Summer and fall blooming
  • Direct sow or transplant
Bupleurum
Yellow and lime-green flowers. Great bouquet filler. Credit: Bupleurum.

Hellebores

Green helleborus
Helleborus viridis, a winter flower. Credit: Lenin

Helleborus viridis, or green hellebore, is a perennial, low-growing flower that can be evergreen in warmer areas. Several green cultivars are available, including 鈥楲ush Green鈥 and 鈥業rish Luck鈥. Learn more about growing hellebore.

  • USDA Zones 5-9
  • About 18鈥24 inches tall
  • Partial sun to partial shade
  • Blooms late spring to early summer

Bells of Ireland

Bells of Ireland
Funnel-shaped bells in pale green to emerald green. Credit: weha

No list of green flowers would be complete without this green tower, Bells of Ireland (Moluccella laevi). While technically, the calyx or whorl of sepals form the green display, you鈥檇 never know. Long stems are adorned with large, 2-inch, bell-shaped blooms in bright spring green. 

  • 2鈥4 feet tall
  • Annual
  • Transplant after starting indoors
  • Blooms late spring into summer

Celosia

Green Sylphid Celosia
Feather light, chartreuse plumes. Love the color! Credit: . 

鈥楪reen Slyphid鈥 is a truly chartreuse celosia with trademark feathery plumes and an ethereal effect. 

Celosia is a flower that grows very easily from seed. Plant a patch of them and enjoy watching them wave in the breeze. They grow well in pots, too, and have an excellent vase life.

  • Full sun
  • Up to 40 inches tall
  • Annual
  • Start indoors and transplant

Zinnias

Green Zinnia
What a beauty! 鈥楺ueen Lime鈥 zinnia flower. Credit: Bethany Towne

If you grow zinnias, you鈥檝e likely heard of 鈥楺ueen Lime鈥. This is the new variety, 鈥楺ueen Lime Blush鈥. Stunning! The same light green blooms with a dusky pink center on strong stems make this a great cut flower or just a nice addition to your zinnia border along the driveway. If you don鈥檛 have a zinnia border along a driveway or path, you should. It鈥檚 about the easiest and least expensive hedge of colorful flowers you can get.

  • Full sun
  • Annual
  • Blooms summer into fall
  • Direct seed
  • 30鈥40 inches tall

Lisianthus

Pistachio-green blooms! Credit:

鈥楻osanne 2 Clear Green鈥 is a truly green lisianthus with trademark ruffled blooms on long stems. This heat-loving native loves dry days and warm summer nights. It鈥檚 notoriously slow-growing, so most gardeners plant plugs rather than seeds.

  • 28鈥36 inches tall
  • Annual
  • 140 days to maturity (start them early!)
  • Start indoors and transplant
  • Full sun

鈥楪reen Halo鈥 Peonies

If you鈥檙e a peony lover, consider this unusual green-glowing variety! .

鈥楪reen Halo鈥 peonies have large, 6- to 7-inch blooms with a light green base from which a tuft of creamy white petals arises, creating a green glow. This is a sought-after peony for a gardener who enjoys something unusual. It has great vigor and generous blooming, and it is carefree and low maintenance.

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥8
  • Full to partial sun
  • About 30 inches tall
  • Mid-spring blooming

Hydrangeas 

Fairytrail庐 Green Hydrangea with cool, lime-green flowers. Credit:

Green hydrangeas like 鈥楩airytrail Green鈥 add a larger green bounty to your yard. Arching branches topped with large misty green blooms make excellent cut flower selections. If your gardening climate is too chilly to leave them out over winter, they can also be grown in containers. See how to grow hydrangeas.

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;6鈥9
  • Partial shade
  • 4鈥5 feet tall
  • Plant in spring or fall

Native Flowers can be green, too!

Canada Milk Vetch (Astragalus canadensis)

Canada Milk Vetch
A nectar source for bees! The green flowers add interest to cut flower arrangements. Source: Jerrold James Griffith

This perennial native is common throughout the United States and Canada. Its unique leaf shape and texture are reason enough to plant it, and the nectar is loved by bees. The tall, green spikes of flowers remind me of lupines.

  • 36 inches tall
  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥8
  • Blooms mid- to late summer
  • Full to partial sun

Spider Milkweed (Asclepias viridis)

green milkweed in the garden
Green Milkweed (Asclepias viridis) blossoms in the Texas summer waiting for pollinators to visit. Credit: John_P_Anderson

This beauty has a typical tall, single-stemmed milkweed shape with a hydrangea-looking flower on top. It鈥檚 much shorter than other milkweeds and has the ability to spread, making it a good choice for gardens. Plus, milkweed attracts Monarch butterflies, who need all the help they can get. It鈥檚 also rarely bothered by deer.

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;5鈥9
  • Full to partial sun
  • Blooms early summer
  • Transplant

Coneflowers

Green Twister coneflower
鈥楪reen Twister鈥 coneflower with giant bright green and magenta flowers! Credit: Alex Manders

Echinacea cultivars have taken the gardening world by storm鈥擨 have three or four myself. With breeders working nonstop to develop new colors, we鈥檙e not limited to purple anymore. Several green-blooming cultivars are out there, including 鈥楢lan鈥檚 Pride鈥, 鈥楶rairie Blaze鈥, and 鈥楪reen Twister鈥. They bloom continuously from summer through fall and last for weeks as cut flowers. See Green Envy and more coneflower varieties.

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥9
  • Full to partial sun
  • Blooms in summer
  • Start indoors and transplant or direct seed

Short Green Milkweed (Asclepias viridiflora)

short green milkweed asclepias viridflora
The green flower of this native milkweed attract long-tongued bees and Monarchs! Credit: Brian Wollman

As the name suggests, Short Green Milkweed tops out around a foot tall. Its light green blooms shift to darker greenish purple as the season progresses. It prefers drier locations and is deer-munch鈥搑esistant. It is also a host for Monarch butterflies. Learn more about growing milkweed.

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥9
  • Full to partial sun
  • Blooms early summer
  • Transplant or fall sow

Jack-in-the-Pulpit

Arisaema triphyllum
Jack-in-the-Pulpit is a native woodland garden plant. Credit:

Arisaema triphyllum, or Jack-in-the-Pulpit, grows best in woodland shady locations with rich soil and some moisture. It forms shiny green berries in summer, which turn red in autumn. It鈥檚 native to the eastern half of the country, where the hardwood forests start to take over from the short-grass prairies. Even better, it鈥檚 deer-resistant.

  • Up to 24 inches tall
  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥9
  • Early spring blooming
  • Fall outdoor sowing or transplant

Spring Blooming Bulbs

Gladiolus

Green gladiolus in the garden.
Green gladiolus in the garden. Credit: Green Gladiolus

Glads are among my favorites, and I grow them every year. If you haven鈥檛 had a green gladiola yet, you鈥檙e missing out. Their green apple color sticks out like a strobe light in a bouquet. 鈥楪reen Star鈥 is a favorite; a dozen planted together will make a splash. Succession plant every two weeks for an extended bloom season. See how to grow gladioli.

  • Spring planted bulb
  • 4 feet tall (or more)
  • Summer blooming
  • Full sun for best color


鈥楶ride of Ireland鈥 Bearded Iris

Chartreuse blooms enhanced by a darker hue on the underside. Credit:

A light yellow-green bearded iris is perfect for contrasting with other spring flowers. Intersperse it with white irises for a spring color palette that will last year after year. 

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;4鈥9
  • About 3 feet tall
  • Full to partial sun
  • Blooms in late spring

鈥楽pring Green鈥 Tulips

The green central veins of this tulip鈥檚 petals flare into creamy white edges. Credit: Andrew Fletcher.

Rounding out a spring-blooming selection, these tulips are white to pale green with deeper-colored accents and anthers. Plant tulips with other spring bulbs or in a bed with early spring greenery for a complementary and designed look. See our chart on spring-flowering bulbs (which you plant in fall).

  • USDA 窜辞苍别蝉&苍产蝉辫;3鈥8
  • Full to partial sun
  • 18 inches tall
  • Blooms in late spring

Did this list of green flowers surprise you? Do you have any favorites? We鈥檇 love to hear from you in the comments below.

About The Author

Andy Wilcox

Andy Wilcox is a flower farmer and master gardener with a passion for soil health, small producers, forestry, and horticulture. Read More from Andy Wilcox