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  2. Tradescantia pallida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tradescantia_pallida

    It is distinguished by vivid purple, elongated and slightly pointed leaves—generally a glaucous green, turning more vividly purple in full sunlight and times of drought—and bearing small, three-petaled flowers of white, pink or purple.

  3. Tradescantia zebrina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tradescantia_zebrina

    Tradescantia zebrina has attractive zebra-patterned leaves, the upper surface showing purple new growth and green older growth parallel to the central axis, as well as two broad silver-colored stripes on the outer edges, with the lower leaf surface presenting a deep uniform magenta. The leaves are bluish green and usually have two longitudinal ...

  4. Heuchera micrantha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heuchera_micrantha

    The leaves are lobed and usually coated in glandular hairs. They are green to reddish-green or purple-green in color and may have very long, gland-dotted petioles. The plant produces an erect inflorescence up to a meter high bearing many clusters of pink, white, or greenish flowers.

  5. Saxifraga oppositifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saxifraga_oppositifolia

    Saxifraga oppositifolia, the purple saxifrage or purple mountain saxifrage, is a species of plant that is very common in the high Arctic and also some high mountainous areas further south, including northern Britain, the Alps and the Rocky Mountains.

  6. Echinacea purpurea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echinacea_purpurea

    Echinacea purpurea is an herbaceous perennial up to 120 cm (47 in) tall by 25 cm (10 in) wide at maturity. Depending on the climate, it blooms throughout summer into autumn. Its cone-shaped flowering heads are usually, but not always, purple in the wild.

  7. Amaranthus blitum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amaranthus_blitum

    The green or purplish leaves are up to 10 cm (4 in) long on stalks of a similar length and are arranged spirally. They are simple, roughly triangular in shape and have entire margins. The inflorescence is a spike with the tiny male and female flowers clustered together.

  8. Linaria purpurea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linaria_purpurea

    Linaria purpurea or purple toadflax is a purple-flowered plant native to Italy, part of the plantain family (Plantaginaceae). It is sometimes planted in gardens and is also an introduced weed in North America and other parts of Europe.

  9. Collinsia heterophylla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collinsia_heterophylla

    Collinsia heterophylla, known as purple Chinese houses or innocence, is a flowering plant native to California and the Peninsular Ranges in northern Baja California.

  10. Trillium grandiflorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trillium_grandiflorum

    It is easily recognised by its attractive three-petaled white flowers, opening from late spring to early summer, that rise above a whorl of three leaf-like bracts. It is an example of a spring ephemeral, a plant whose life-cycle is synchronised with that of the deciduous woodland which it favours.

  11. Digitalis purpurea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitalis_purpurea

    Digitalis purpurea, the foxglove or common foxglove, is a toxic species of flowering plant in the plantain family Plantaginaceae, [2] native to and widespread throughout most of temperate Europe. [3] It has also naturalized in parts of North America, as well as some other temperate regions.