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Lady's mantle is a perennial ground cover with large circular scallop-edged leaves and sparse chartreuse flower clusters. It's planted as a mounding ground cover under trees or other difficult areas. A mass planting of lady's mantle is eye-catching when in bloom, largely losing its impact after flowering but keeping its foliage lush and intact.
Ever-popular lady’s mantle lends an interesting texture to any landscape with its fuzzy, cup-like leaves that hold onto water droplets like little gems. Lady’s mantle features dainty yellow flowers that bloom in late spring to early summer in airy masses above the foliage.
Cultivated since the 19th century, award-winner Alchemilla mollis (Lady’s Mantle) provides a lovely finish to a border or a path edge and blends beautifully with most perennials.
Lady's mantle (Alchemilla mollis or Alchemilla vulgaris) is an attractive perennial plant. Its soft gray-green foliage is semi-round with scalloped-shaped leaves. In late spring and early summer, the plant produces nearly inconspicuous chartreuse (yellow-green) blooms.
He considers folksy adages priceless treasures and is fueled almost entirely by beer and hot sauce. Lady’s mantle is hardy and adaptable, a leafy plant that’s perfect for a variety of gardens. Read more about it in our expert guide now!
Lady’s mantle is an easy-to-grow old-fashioned perennial, with a bit of care and oversight from the responsible gardener. Here are guidelines on how best to plant, grow, and care for lady’s mantle in the garden.
Lady’s mantle, Alchemilla mollis, is an old-fashioned, tough and adaptable European garden perennial grown for both its interesting foliage and frothy sprays of flowers. It is the most commonly planted of nearly 300 species in the genus in the rose family (Rosaceae) native to the mountains of Europe, Asia, and North America.