By Williamson – 1969
This is a miniature daylily growing to only 1 ½ feet with 2 ½ inch blooms. The plant is an evergreen, diploid with fragrant fuchsia blossoms that blooms and re-blooms starting mid-season.
By Wheeler – 1947
This is a mini daylily that stays less than 15 inches. It starts blooming early and keeps blooming with a mass of 3 inch red flowers. These red flowers won’t fade or spot in hot sun. They hold the bright red/orange well and the throat is a very bright gold. Sometimes the edges are also touched in gold. Evergreen; diploid.
By Stamile 1980
Wineberry is a favorite member of the “candy” series. It is a slightly fragrant, dormant tetraploid that is a mid-season rebloomer. The 4.5 inch bright pink flowers have a dark purple/magenta eye-zone. They seem to get darker as they age. She has won the Stout Silver Medal, L. Ernest Plouf Award and an AHS Award of Merit.
By Stamile 1993
Another beauty in the “Candy” series; this slightly fragrant dormant tetraploid starts early and then reblooms. The 4.5 inch blooms seem to be a different color at different times in the season. A google image search will verify this. Sometimes the blooms are cream/pink and sometimes more pale yellow. These pictures are from the same plant. The eye-zone is always a bright raspberry red hence the name. She is the winner of a L. Ernest Plouf Award.
By Salter 1988
She is the cutest of the cute. Truly a miniature at only a foot tall, with blooms that are less than 2″; the flowers are rose with a burgundy eye, green throat and a thin gold ruffled edge. This mid-season rebloomer is a semi evergreen diploid.
Parentage: (Enchanter’s Spell × sdlg)
$10.00
By Lankart 1979
This really is the true color of this darling miniature daylily. It is bright fuchsia and perfectly round and ruffled. The plant is truly miniature at only a foot tall, but for its size the flowers are fairly big at 3 inches. She is a semi-evergreen diploid and blooms early to mid-season.
By Wilson 1983
A spider daylily that looks a little different each time it opens, because of the way it twists and curls. This semi-evergreen diploid holds 6 inch flowers on top of tall 3 foot scapes. The flower has a spider ratio of 4.4:1 and the color is difficult to explain starting from the center there is a wide yellow throat and the smaller petals are this same color. The large upper petals are slightly wider and gradually fade from apricot to orange to dark red.
Parentage: (Sdlg. X FERRIS WHEEL)
$9.00
By Apps 1991
Final Touch is a late blooming (get it? Final Touch?), slightly fragrant dormant diploid. It is a bi-colored pink panther pink with the lower petals being lighter pink and it has a bright gold throat. It is winner of the Eugene S. Foster Award. Many years it re-blooms until frost.
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