FLASH SALES: 20% off selected plants for your garden
Share your pictures? Hide split images
I have read and agree the terms and conditions of service.

Digitalis purpurea - Common Foxglove

Digitalis purpurea
Foxglove, Common Foxglove, Lady's Glove

4,2/5
65 reviews
12 reviews
9 reviews
3 reviews
10 reviews

Yellowed leaves, the young plant doesn't look well. The package was delivered to a different collection point than the one I requested, and closed over the weekend. 91 pounds worth of lost order.

Catherine, 19/12/2023

Leave a review → View all reviews →

Why not try an alternative variety in stock?

  1. Out of stock
    From €2.90 8/9 cm pot

    Available in 2 sizes

  2. 44
    €5.50 8/9 cm pot

    Available in 2 sizes

  3. 35
    From €3.90 8/9 cm pot

    Available in 2 sizes

  4. 19
    €3.50 Seeds

  5. 42
    From €3.80 Plug plant 3/4cm

    Available in 2 sizes

  6. 47
    From €4.90 7/8 cm pot

  7. 94
    -20% €3.60 €4.50 Plug plant 3/4cm

    Available in 2 sizes

Select delivery date,

and select date in basket

This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

More information

A hardy biennial plant, or a perennial if one takes care to prune the flowers before seed formation. In summer, it forms long spikes of tubular flowers in shades of pink and purple, sometimes even white, with a throat spotted with purple. These spontaneous plants naturalise in partially shaded areas.
Flower size
6 cm
Height at maturity
1.50 m
Spread at maturity
30 cm
Exposure
Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -29°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
plantfit-full

Does this plant fit my garden?

Set up your Plantfit profile →

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time March to May, September to November
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Flowering time June to August
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D

Description

Digitalis purpurea, also known as purple foxglove or common foxglove, is a very charming plant, found spontaneously in cool undergrowth, and inseparable from old shady gardens. Biennial or perennial, depending on growing conditions, it easily naturalises itself through spontaneous sowing, randomly punctuating the garden with large arrows of varying shades of pink, purple, or even sometimes creamy-white. Its enchanting flowering is a delight for the eyes in flower beds, but it can also be grown in a large pot on a patio. The flower stems can also be cut to form large bouquets. Fresh and refined, foxgloves pair well with all other plants, from the simplest to the most sophisticated.

 

Digitalis purpurea is a botanical species from the Plantaginaceae family. It has given rise to numerous forms and varieties of various colours that easily hybridise with each other. It is a biennial to perennial herbaceous plant. In spring, it develops a large rosette with a diameter of 45cm (18in). This rosette consists of crenate-dentate pubescent leaves, which are dark green with a slightly greyish appearance. They bear a network of ridges on the lower surface. They are covered with slightly woolly, very light hairs. In May-June of their second year, up to 5 hollow but sturdy stems emerge from the rosette to bear a very dense floral spike up to 1.5m (5ft) in height, composed of a multitude of tightly packed tubular flowers, opening from bottom to top. Each bell-shaped flower is a ballet of bees and bumblebees, tirelessly coming to feed on nectar and pollen. Depending on the individual plant, their colour is generally a light purple or a muted pink, more rarely white or cream-yellow, with varying amounts of mottling and punctuations of purple in the throat.

 

Plant your foxgloves in dappled sunlight or partial shade, in humus-rich and moist soil, in the company of old roses or perennials with single flowers such as columbines, centaureas, astrantias, or meadow rues. These plants readily self-sow, allowing you to enjoy their presence for a long time in a naturally inspired shady garden. This magnificent plant, as wild as it is romantic, will also accompany geraniums, heucheras, and the feathery foliage of ferns in open woodland areas. Take advantage of this wonder in your home as well, by creating sumptuous bouquets.

  

 


 

Digitalis purpurea - Common Foxglove in pictures

Digitalis purpurea - Common Foxglove (Flowering) Flowering
Digitalis purpurea - Common Foxglove (Foliage) Foliage
Digitalis purpurea - Common Foxglove (Plant habit) Plant habit

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time June to August
Inflorescence Spike
Flower size 6 cm
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Semi-evergreen
Foliage colour medium green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.50 m
Spread at maturity 30 cm
Growth rate fast

Safety measures

Potential risks Plant may be toxic if swallowed

Botanical data

Genus

Digitalis

Species

purpurea

Family

Scrophulariaceae

Other common names

Foxglove, Common Foxglove, Lady's Glove

Origin

Western Europe

Planting and care

Purple foxgloves and their varieties prefer partial shade and neutral to slightly acidic, loose and humus-rich soil, that is not too rich. They are very hardy plants, but their lifespan is quite short. They self-seed abundantly in the garden, but the resulting plants are rarely identical to the parent plants when it comes to horticultural selections. Some species self-seed a lot. If you don't want to be overrun, cut the flower stalks just after flowering.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time March to May, September to November

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Woodland edge
Type of use Border
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Planting density 9 per m2
Exposure Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Soil moisture Moist soil, rich in humus

Care

Pruning instructions Keep all the floral stems during the first years of cultivation to promote spontaneous sowings. In the following years, cut some faded floral stems as they appear. Always keep at least two withered stems so that the seeds can be dispersed.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time August to September
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
4,2/5

Summer flowering perennials

Haven't found what you were looking for?