Garden designers choose their favourite dahlia

Garden designers choose their favourite dahlia

Three garden designers and landscape architects – Arabella Lennox-Boyd, Ula Maria and Jo Thompson – choose their favourite dahlias for late-season colour.

Published: August 15, 2024 at 8:21 am

Dahlias are a boon in late summer. Here some of the top garden designers and plants people choose their favourite dahlia.

Don't miss our guide on how to grow your own dahlias.

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Arabella Lennox-Boyd

Internationally renowned designer with more than 40 years experience chooses her favourite dahlias.

Dahlia ‘Bishop of Auckland’

© Dorling Kindersley ltd/Alamy

A most elegant, single-flowered dahlia, very prolific and adored by bees and butterflies.  I plant it through Anemanthele lessoniana, Agapanthus ‘Midnight Star’ and Caryopteris x clandonensis ‘Heavenly Blue’ as if in a meadow. One of the best of the Bishop Series. Flowers: July – September. Height: 1m.

Dahlia ‘Arabian Night’

© Rachel Warne

This dahlia's large, double, velvety dark, burgundy blooms are perfect for mixing in a border. In my own it’s surrounded by Succisa pratensis, Deschampsia and Phlox paniculata ‘Düsterlohe’. The almost black heads add a rich texture to the border. Flowers: June – September. Height: 1.2m.

Ula Maria

Chelsea award-winning garden designer, landscape architect and illustrator with a deep connection to nature chooses her favourite dahlias.

Dahlia ‘Honka Fragile’

Dahlia 'Honka Fragile' © Tim Gainey/Alamy - © Tim Gainey/Alamy

This distinctive star-shaped dahlia with radiating petals that roll inwards at their tips is really striking both in a border and a cut-flower display. The white flowers are delicately edged in pink-red. Never fails to draw attention. Flowers: July – November. Height: 80cm.

Dahlia ‘Waltzing Mathilda’

© John Martin/Alamy

A semi-double dahlia with ever so slightly twisting petals that lend it a more relaxed appeal. Flowers are a wash of orangey coral pink, set off against dark purple brown stems and foliage. I love it nestled among large clumps of airy ornamental grasses. AGM. Flowers: July – November. Height: 70cm.

Jo Thompson

Award-winning garden designer, and plantswoman with a love of romantic planting chooses her favourite dahlias below.

Dahlia ‘Lilac Time’

© Peter D Anderson/ Alamy

A magnificent yet neat dinner-plate dahlia in shades of pinkish-lilac-blue. It is quite restrained and exudes self-control – I like to grow it with unruly Gaura to create a yin and yang contrast that relaxes the whole feel. Flowers: June – October. Height: 1.1m.

Dahlia ‘Purple Gem’

© Gksflorapics/Alamy

A regal dahlia, cactus in form and looking at home in many colour combinations in the border. Hints of deep lilac-blue at the centre of the flowers, becoming lighter along the petals, make this a very useful cultivar both in the border and in a vase. Flowers: July – September. Height: 1m.

Dahlia merckii

© Jason Ingram

So restrained, so elegant – single flowers of palest mother-of -pearl pink with muted yellow centres. The flowers sit high atop the tall stems and nod gently, a very lovely punctuation in the border. Unlike most dahlias, it is fairly hardy in the UK. Flowers: July – September. Height: 1.5m.

Where to buy dahlias

Halls of HeddonWest Heddon Nursery,Heddon on the Wall,Newcastle upon Tyne NE15 0JS. Tel 01661 852445,hallsofheddon.com

J Parkers16 Hadfield Street, Stretford,Manchester M16 9FG. Tel 0161 848 1100,jparkers.co.uk

Peter Nyssen124 Flixton Road, Urmston,Manchester M41 5BG. Tel 0161 747 4000,peternyssen.com

Sarah Raven1 Woodstock Court, Blenheim Road,Marlborough, Wiltshire SN8 4AN. Tel 0345 092 0283,sarahraven.com

Jason Ingram

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