Please make sure JavaScript is enabled.
 
Silverleafed Glory Bush in the GardenTags plant encyclopedia

Tibouchina Heteromalla

 

Silverleafed Glory Bush

Tibouchina heteromalla is an evergreen and reaches an average height of 40cm. It produces silvery green leaves that are velvety and oppositely arranged. The inflorescence supports a panicle of several purple flowers with five petals.

Contributed by @melvynprentice

 
plant Features
  • Silverleafed Glory Bush likes partial shade

    Partial shade

  • Silverleafed Glory Bush likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

  • Silverleafed Glory Bush is not frost hardy

    Not Frost hardy

  • Silverleafed Glory Bush likes light and free draining

    Light and free draining

 
plant information

Common name

Silverleafed Glory Bush

Latin name

Tibouchina Heteromalla

type

Evergreen Shrub

family

Melastomataceae

ph

5.0 - 6.5 Acid - Neutral

  • Light

    Silverleafed Glory Bush likes partial shade

    Partial shade

  • Frost

    Silverleafed Glory Bush is not frost hardy

    Not Frost hardy

  • Soil

    Silverleafed Glory Bush likes light and free draining

    Light and free draining

  • Water

    Silverleafed Glory Bush likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

Plant & bloom calendar

  •  
    Best time to plant
  •  
    When the plant will bloom

full grown dimensions

The size of a fully grown Silverleafed Glory Bush is 0.40meters x 0.40meters 0.40 M 0.40 M

Tibouchina Heteromalla

Tibouchina heteromalla is an evergreen and reaches an average height of 40cm. It produces silvery green leaves that are velvety and oppositely arranged. The inflorescence supports a panicle of several purple flowers with five petals.


Propogation by cuttings

From Early Spring TO Early Spring

Take stem or tip cuttings 8-10cm long in spring. Trim each cutting to just below a pair of leaves, remove the bottom leaves and dip the cut end of cutting in hormone rooting powder. Plant the cutting in an 8cm pot filled with a moistened equal parts of peat moss and coarse sand or perlite. Enclose the whole in a plastic bag or propagating case and stand it in a warm room in bright filtered light. When new growth appears, uncover it and begin to water it moderately. After a further eight weeks, move the young plant into a 10cm pot of standard potting mixture and treat it as a mature specimen.

 

Planting

From Early Spring TO Early Spring

Tibouchina prefer slightly acidic soils with a good amount of organic matter and good drainage, but will adapt to most well-drained garden soils: from very acid to slightly alkaline. Tibouchinas will not thrive in soils that are too alkaline and will show signs of burn around the leaf margins and yellowing between the leaf veins. They are adapted to chalk, clay loam, loam, loamy sand, sandy clay loam and sandy loam soils; but if the soil is less than ideal, dig lots of acid compost into the planting hole and mulch the roots often.

 

Flowering Season

From Late Spring TO Mid Winter

Some flowers are open throughout the year but they are especially plentiful from late Spring to mid Winter

 
Subscribe to GardenTags Premium to get personalised planting tasks and more for your entire plant collection
 
Gardeners who are growing this plant