Garden style

The Hot Border: A Planting of Fiery Reds, Oranges, and Golds

Turn up the heat. A bold, sun-drenched border of fiery reds, oranges, and golds that crescendos in late summer.

Bishop of Llandaff in bloom

If the white garden is cool and calming, the hot border is its opposite: loud, energetic, and unapologetic. Fiery reds, blazing oranges, and rich golds vibrate against each other and seem to pull the sun right down into the bed. It is a scheme that peaks gloriously in the heat of late summer, just as softer plantings start to fade.

Hot colours advance toward the eye, so a hot border feels close, full, and dramatic. The secret is to layer the shades, true reds with oranges and golds, and to ground them with dark foliage so the whole thing reads as rich rather than gaudy. Build from the full lists of red and orange flowers.

Fiery perennials

These are the core of a hot border: sun-lovers in the hottest colours that return every year and flower for weeks.

Lucifer, Crocosmia 'Lucifer'
Crocosmia 'Lucifer'

The definitive hot-border plant: arching sprays of pure scarlet trumpets over sword-like leaves.

Sneezeweed, Helenium
Helenium

Daisies in burnt orange, red, and gold that carry the colours of autumn into the border.

Blanket Flower, Gaillardia
Gaillardia

Blanket flower, throwing out red-and-gold daisies nonstop through the heat of summer.

Red Hot Poker, Kniphofia
Kniphofia

Torches of orange and red on tall stems, dramatic, architectural, and loved by hummingbirds.

Hot Papaya, Echinacea 'Hot Papaya'
Echinacea 'Hot Papaya'

A coneflower in vivid orange-red, double-centred and glowing, on a tough, drought-proof plant.

Bee Balm, Monarda
Monarda

Shaggy scarlet heads that bring in the pollinators and add a jolt of pure red.

Golden glow to balance the heat

A hot border needs gold and yellow to give the reds and oranges room to breathe and to tie the scheme together.

Goldsturm, Rudbeckia fulgida 'Goldsturm'
Rudbeckia fulgida 'Goldsturm'

Sheets of golden daisies with dark centres, the workhorse gold of the late-summer border.

Zagreb, Coreopsis verticillata 'Zagreb'
Coreopsis verticillata 'Zagreb'

A froth of small golden-yellow stars on fine foliage that blooms for months.

Coronation Gold, Achillea 'Coronation Gold'
Achillea 'Coronation Gold'

Flat plates of mustard-gold on silvery foliage, long-lasting and drought-tough.

Daylily, Hemerocallis
Hemerocallis

Trumpets in warm gold and orange, opening fresh every single day through high summer.

Late-season fire: bulbs and grasses

For the grand finale, add tender bulbs planted in spring and a grass or two to catch the low autumn light.

Bishop of Llandaff, Dahlia 'Bishop of Llandaff'
Dahlia 'Bishop of Llandaff'

Blazing scarlet single flowers above near-black foliage, the ultimate hot-border dahlia.

Canna Lily, Canna
Canna

Big tropical leaves and bold red flowers that bring real drama and height to the back of the bed.

Tiger Lily, Lilium lancifolium
Lilium lancifolium

Recurved orange petals freckled with black, exotic and unmistakable in midsummer.

Shenandoah, Panicum virgatum 'Shenandoah'
Panicum virgatum 'Shenandoah'

An upright native grass tipped red in fall, adding movement and a smoky haze.

Ground the fire with dark foliage

Hot colours sing loudest against deep, moody foliage. Weave in dark-leaved plants, the near-black leaves of a Bishop dahlia, purple heuchera, a burgundy ninebark, and the reds and oranges will look richer and far more deliberate.

What plants make a hot-coloured border?

Crocosmia, helenium, blanket flower, red hot poker, hot-coloured coneflowers and dahlias, plus golden black-eyed susans and coreopsis to balance the reds and oranges.

How do I combine hot colours without it looking messy?

Repeat a few key plants through the border, include plenty of gold and yellow to give the reds breathing room, and ground the scheme with dark foliage so it reads as rich rather than chaotic.

When does a hot border look its best?

Late summer into early fall, when many of these heat-loving plants peak together and the lower, warmer light makes the fiery colours glow.

Design a garden with these plants

Open BloomsEye Studio with this guide's plants ready to drop onto a plan, then watch the whole bed bloom across the year.

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