Garden style

The White Garden: A Moonlight Border That Glows at Dusk

A border that glows after sunset. White flowers, silver foliage, and evening scent, layered to carry every season.

Iceberg in bloom

A white garden is one of the most atmospheric things you can plant. In daylight it reads as cool and elegant, but at dusk, when other colours drain away, the white flowers and pale foliage hold the last of the light and seem to glow. That is the whole idea behind a moonlight border, and it is why the most famous garden room in the world, the White Garden at Sissinghurst, is at its most magical at twilight.

The craft of it is to think in layers and seasons, and to let foliage carry as much as the flowers. Browse the full set of white-blooming plants to build your own, and use the bloom calendar on each to keep something pale and luminous open from late winter to fall.

Anchor the border with white shrubs and roses

Start with the structure: a few shrubs and a rose give the border its bones, height, and several of its best scents. These carry the planting when the perennials are between flushes.

Iceberg, Rosa 'Korbin'
Rosa 'Korbin'

Clusters of pure white that never stop from late spring to frost, the definitive white-garden rose.

Smooth Hydrangea, Hydrangea arborescens
Hydrangea arborescens

Huge rounded heads of white that almost seem to glow at dusk, the classic Annabelle look for light shade.

Madame Lemoine, Syringa vulgaris 'Madame Lemoine'
Syringa vulgaris 'Madame Lemoine'

Double, pure-white, powerfully fragrant lilac, one of the great scents of late spring.

Belle Étoile, Philadelphus 'Belle Etoile'
Philadelphus 'Belle Etoile'

Single white flowers with an orange-blossom perfume that carries right across the garden in early summer.

Koreanspice, Viburnum carlesii
Viburnum carlesii

Rounded heads that open white from pink buds, with an intense, carrying clove scent.

White perennials for the summer border

These do the heavy lifting through summer. Mix flower shapes, daisies, spires, and big blowsy blooms, so the all-white scheme stays interesting rather than flat.

Festiva Maxima, Paeonia 'Festiva Maxima'
Paeonia 'Festiva Maxima'

Enormous, ruffled, fragrant white blooms flecked with crimson, on a plant that can outlive the gardener.

Becky, Leucanthemum × superbum 'Becky'
Leucanthemum × superbum 'Becky'

Crisp white daisies on strong stems that never flop, flowering for months on end.

David, Phlox paniculata 'David'
Phlox paniculata 'David'

Tall heads of fragrant pure white in high summer, and famously resistant to mildew.

White Swan, Echinacea purpurea 'White Swan'
Echinacea purpurea 'White Swan'

White coneflowers with golden centres that feed pollinators all summer, then seed heads for the birds.

Snow Hill, Salvia × sylvestris 'Schneehügel'
Salvia × sylvestris 'Schneehügel'

Clean white spikes that start early and rebloom when sheared, a tidy filler near the front.

Spring whites to open the year

Plant these in autumn and the border starts glowing as early as late winter, long before the summer plants wake up.

Snowdrop, Galanthus
Galanthus

The first white of the year, nodding bells that push up through the last of the frost.

Christmas Rose, Helleborus niger
Helleborus niger

Pure white cups in the depths of winter on an evergreen, shade-loving plant.

Mount Hood, Narcissus 'Mount Hood'
Narcissus 'Mount Hood'

A tall, elegant daffodil that opens soft cream and matures to pure white.

White Triumphator, Tulipa 'White Triumphator'
Tulipa 'White Triumphator'

Lily-flowered tulips with pointed, reflexed petals in clean white, pure elegance on a stem.

Mount Everest, Allium stipitatum 'Mount Everest'
Allium stipitatum 'Mount Everest'

Big white drumstick spheres on tall stems that bridge spring into early summer.

White for the shade

Shade is where a white scheme really earns its keep, because pale flowers and variegated leaves light up the dim corners where colours would simply disappear.

Bridal Veil, Astilbe × arendsii 'Brautschleier'
Astilbe × arendsii 'Brautschleier'

Arching, feathery white plumes that light up a damp, shady spot in early summer.

Camelot White, Digitalis purpurea 'Camelot White'
Digitalis purpurea 'Camelot White'

Tall white spires of freckled bells for the back of a shaded border.

Alba, Lamprocapnos spectabilis 'Alba'
Lamprocapnos spectabilis 'Alba'

Arching stems hung with white heart-shaped lockets, perfect in cool shade.

Francee, Hosta 'Francee'
Hosta 'Francee'

Heart-shaped leaves edged in crisp white that brighten dark corners all season long.

Lily of the Valley, Convallaria majalis
Convallaria majalis

Tiny, intensely fragrant white bells that carpet deep shade, one of the sweetest scents there is.

The moonlight touch: flowers that shine after dark

The signature of a true moonlight garden is a handful of plants that come into their own at night, opening late or turning fragrant as the light fades. Plant them where you sit on a summer evening.

Moonflower, Ipomoea alba
Ipomoea alba

A climber whose huge white trumpets unfurl at dusk and pour out a heady evening scent.

Flowering Tobacco, Nicotiana
Nicotiana

Star-shaped white flowers that turn powerfully fragrant in the cool of the evening.

Snow Princess, Lobularia 'Snow Princess'
Lobularia 'Snow Princess'

A long ribbon of tiny white flowers with a honey scent, flowering nonstop until frost.

Pair white with silver and green

White only reads as luminous when it has something to contrast against. Weave in silver-leaved plants like lamb's ear and artemisia, and leave plenty of green foliage between the flowers, so the whites look crisp and bright rather than washed out.

What is a white garden?

It is a border or garden room planted almost entirely in white flowers and silver or green foliage. Because pale colours catch the evening light, a white garden glows at dusk and even under moonlight, which is why it is often called a moonlight garden.

What are the best plants for a white garden?

Layer white roses, hydrangeas, and fragrant shrubs for structure, then peonies, phlox, and shasta daisies for summer, snowdrops and white daffodils for spring, and astilbe, foxglove, and white-edged hostas for shade.

How do I stop a white garden looking washed out?

Give it contrast. Lean on silver and green foliage, vary the flower shapes and heights, and deadhead promptly, since a browning white flower shows far more than a fading coloured one.

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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