How to Grow Wallflower 'Cloth of Gold' from Seed

 

Erysimum cheiri Cloth of Gold wallflower biennial golden yellow clove fragrance April May spring bulbs tulips RHS Pollinators

Bishy Barnabee's Growing Guides

How to Grow
Wallflower 'Cloth of Gold' from Seed

The rich golden-yellow spring classic — Biennial H5; fully hardy; intense clove-like fragrance; rich warm golden-yellow blooms April–May; TOXICITY: all parts poisonous including seeds; sow outdoors May–Jul (Year 1); pinch growing tip; transplant Sep–Oct; partner with deep purple tulips; RHS Plants for Pollinators; outstanding for bumblebees

Wallflower Cloth of Gold is one of the oldest, most consistently-grown, and most immediately recognisable wallflower varieties available: a rich, saturated golden yellow that fills the April–May garden with both colour and the intense clove-like fragrance that has made wallflowers a fixture of British cottage gardens for over 500 years. John Gerard noted wallflowers in church walls in 1596; the clove-scented blooms were carried as Elizabethan nosegays to mask the smells of city streets; and today Cloth of Gold continues to provide the same warm, pure golden display that has made it a staple of spring bedding schemes alongside tulips and forget-me-nots across generations.

As a biennial, Cloth of Gold rewards the simple patience of a two-year cycle: sow outdoors in early summer of Year 1, pinch out the growing tip for bushy branching, transplant to the flowering position in autumn, and in April–May of Year 2 the rich golden clusters emerge with their characteristic warmth and fragrance. One important note: all parts of the wallflower plant are poisonous, particularly the seeds, which contain cheirotoxin. Keep plant material away from children and pets.

Quick Facts at a Glance

Plant Type

Biennial H5 — sow May–Jul (Year 1); fragrant golden-yellow flowers April–May (Year 2)

Colour

Rich golden yellow — large, velvety blooms; a warm, pure gold

TOXICITY

All parts poisonous including seeds; contains cheirotoxin; keep from children and pets

Fragrance

Intense clove-like fragrance; most pronounced on warm sunny spring days

Partner

Plant between mid to late tulips for the classic spring bedding combination

Difficulty






1 out of 5 — one of the easiest biennials; sow, pinch, transplant and enjoy

01

Understanding Cloth of Gold

Toxicity Warning — All Parts Poisonous

All parts of the wallflower plant are poisonous, particularly the seeds. The plant contains cheirotoxin, a compound with effects similar to digitalis (foxglove). Keep seeds and all plant material away from children, and do not eat any part of the plant. Wear gloves when handling large quantities.

Biennial Lifecycle — Sow May–July (Year 1); Flower April–May (Year 2)

Wallflowers are grown as biennials in UK gardens. Sow outdoors in a prepared seedbed from May to July of Year 1, at 6mm depth. Thin to 15cm when large enough; grow on through summer. Pinch out the growing tips in late summer to encourage bushy, multi-stemmed plants. Transplant to final flowering positions in September–October at 30cm spacing. Plants overwinter fully hardy and flower April–May of Year 2 with their characteristic clove-like fragrance.

The Cloth of Gold Standard — Rich Pure Yellow

Cloth of Gold is one of the oldest and most established wallflower varieties — its name reflecting the vivid, unambiguous golden yellow of the blooms. The name itself references the famous Field of the Cloth of Gold, the extravagant 1520 meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I of France, where golden fabric was displayed in abundance. Applied to this wallflower, it perfectly captures the warmth and purity of the colour: a rich, saturated yellow with none of the orange tinge of more coppery varieties, and none of the paleness of a lemon-yellow. It is the definitive warm yellow wallflower, and its clove-like fragrance on a sunny April day is one of the most evocative scents in the spring garden.

02

Sowing & Growing On

Sow Outdoors May–Jul (Year 1) at 6mm — Thin to 15cm — Pinch Growing Tip at 10–15cm — Transplant Sep–Oct to 30cm — Full Sun — Well-Drained Alkaline Soil — Flowers Apr–May (Year 2)

Sow outdoors May–Jul (Year 1) at 6mm. Thin to 15cm. Pinch growing tip at 10–15cm for bushy plants. Transplant Sep–Oct at 30cm. Full sun; well-drained alkaline soil. Flowers Apr–May Year 2. All parts toxic.

  1. Sow outdoors May–July (Year 1) in a prepared seedbed at 6mm depth. Sow thinly; germination occurs readily at 15–20°C within 7–14 days. Thin seedlings to 15cm apart when large enough to handle. Wallflowers can also be sown in modules indoors for transplanting; if so, sow May–June and handle carefully to avoid root disturbance.

  2. Pinch out the growing tip when plants are 10–15cm tall to encourage bushy branching. Unpinched wallflowers grow as a single main stem producing fewer flowers. Pinching redirects energy into side shoots, producing compact, multi-stemmed plants with significantly more flower spikes and a fuller, more attractive display the following spring.

  3. Transplant to final flowering positions in September–October at 30cm spacing. Choose the sunniest, most free-draining position available. If soil is heavy clay or acidic, incorporate lime and grit before planting. Firm plants in well and water thoroughly. Wallflowers establish their root systems through the winter and break into vigorous growth in early spring.

  4. Deadhead regularly during flowering (April–May Year 2) to extend the season. Removing spent flower heads encourages further production from side shoots, extending the flowering period by several weeks. Allow a few plants to set seed fully at the end of the season for self-seeding into surrounding soil, maintaining a perpetual wallflower presence without annual resowing.

03

Growing On & Care

🌸

The Clove Fragrance

Wallflowers produce one of the most powerfully fragrant displays available from a spring garden plant. The clove-like scent — the reason wallflowers and stocks are both called giroflées in French, meaning "clove-scented" — is most intense on warm, sunny spring days when the aromatic compounds are released most readily. A group of wallflowers planted near an entrance door, a bench, or a frequently-walked path creates a fragrant welcome that permeates the garden on calm spring evenings. In a vase indoors, a few stems provide a fragrance that fills a room.

🌷

The Tulip Partnership

Wallflowers reach their peak display in April and May — the same period as mid to late tulips. This synchronisation makes them the classic spring bedding partner: the mounded flower heads of wallflowers at knee height, with tulip stems rising through and above them, creates a layered spring display that has been a staple of British public parks and cottage gardens for over a century. Plant tulip bulbs at the same time as transplanting wallflowers in September–October, spacing bulbs between the wallflower plants at 15cm depth.

🎨

Colour: Rich golden yellow — warm pure gold

Cloth of Gold produces large clusters of rich golden-yellow flowers — a warm, pure gold without the orange tinge of copper-coloured varieties or the coolness of lemon-yellow. The colour works particularly well with deep purple or near-black tulips (Tulipa 'Queen of Night' makes a classic partner), with blue forget-me-nots as an underplanting, and with the contrasting orange-reds of Fire King in a mixed wallflower planting. In a vase, the rich yellow and intense clove fragrance make it one of the most satisfying spring cut flowers available from the cottage garden.

🐝

RHS Plants for Pollinators

Wallflowers are listed on the RHS Plants for Pollinators list. The accessible, open flower structure and abundant nectar production make them one of the most valuable early-spring pollinator plants available. Emerging bumblebee queens — searching for nectar after winter hibernation — are regular and conspicuous visitors, alongside early solitary bees and the first butterflies of the year. In April, a group of flowering wallflowers is rarely without at least one bumblebee feeding on it throughout the warmth of the day.

🏛️

History — From Elizabethan Streets to Norfolk Gardens

Wallflowers have been cultivated in British gardens for at least 500 years. The Elizabethan herbalist John Gerard wrote in 1596 that the wallflower "groweth on bricke and stone walls, in the corners of churches, as also among rubbish and other such stony places everywhere" — capturing both the plant's common name (from its habit of colonising old walls) and its love of the sharp drainage that a pocket of gritty soil in old masonry provides. The name cheiranthus derives from the Greek cheir (hand) and anthos (flower), reflecting the Elizabethan habit of carrying wallflowers as a fragrant nosegay to mask the smells of the street.

⚠️

Club Root — Avoid Brassica Rotation

As a member of the Brassicaceae (cabbage) family, wallflowers are susceptible to club root (Plasmodiophora brassicae), the soil-borne disease that also affects cabbages, cauliflowers, and other brassicas. Never plant wallflowers in soil that has recently grown brassicas with club root problems. Lime the soil before planting (wallflowers prefer alkaline conditions and lime also suppresses club root). In gardens with persistent club root, grow in containers with fresh compost.

04

Biennial Growing Calendar

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow outdoors (May–Jul Year 1; 6mm deep; seedbed)



Grow on; pinch tips (Aug–Sep; bushy multi-stemmed)


Transplant to 30cm (Sep–Oct Year 1)


Golden yellow flowers (Apr–May Year 2; clove fragrance)


Flowers (Apr–May Year 2; rich golden yellow; intense clove fragrance; outstanding with deep purple tulips)
Sow (May–Jul Year 1; 6mm; thin to 15cm; pinch growing tip at 10–15cm); Transplant (Sep–Oct; 30cm)
Sow outdoors in May–July of Year 1, pinch out the growing tip at 10–15cm for a bushy multi-stemmed plant, transplant to a sunny well-drained position in September–October with tulip bulbs planted between, and in April–May of Year 2 Cloth of Gold delivers its rich golden-yellow clove-scented display — one of the finest sights and scents the spring cottage garden can offer.
05

Common Problems & Solutions

Problem Likely Cause What to Do
Plants not flowering in Year 2 Growing tip not pinched; transplanted too late; acid soil Always pinch out growing tips at 10–15cm. Transplant September–October. Check soil pH and lime if acid. Wallflowers require neutral to alkaline soil to flower well.
Club root — swollen distorted roots; plants wilting Brassicaceae family susceptible to club root Avoid planting in soil with a history of club root. Lime soil before planting (pH 7–7.5). Grow in containers with fresh compost in severely affected gardens.
Leggy, sparse single stems; few flowers Growing tip not pinched out at the seedling stage Pinch out the growing tip when plants are 10–15cm tall. This is essential for multi-stemmed, floriferous plants — unpinched wallflowers produce very few flowers on a single main stem.
TOXICITY warning All parts toxic including seeds; contains cheirotoxin Keep away from children and pets. Wear gloves when handling large quantities. Do not eat any part of the plant.
06

Plant Specifications

Latin nameErysimum cheiri 'Cloth of Gold' — Biennial H5 (fully hardy); short-lived perennial grown as biennial
TOXICITYAll parts poisonous, especially seeds — contains cheirotoxin; keep from children and pets
ColourRich golden yellow — warm pure gold; large velvety clusters
FragranceIntense clove-like fragrance; most pronounced on warm sunny days; excellent cut flower
HeightTo 45cm
BiennialSow May–Jul (Year 1); pinch tips; transplant Sep–Oct; flowers Apr–May (Year 2)
SoilFull sun; well-drained neutral to alkaline soil; lime if acid; avoid waterlogged clay
PollinatorsRHS Plants for Pollinators; outstanding for bumblebees and early butterflies in April–May
Partner withMid to late tulips — plant tulip bulbs between wallflowers in September–October
NotesHeirloom variety; pairs superbly with deep purple or near-black tulips
Grow Your Own

Rich golden-yellow clove-scented clusters in April and May — the definitive warm yellow wallflower that has filled spring cottage gardens for 500 years

Sow outdoors May–July (Year 1) at 6mm depth in a seedbed. Thin to 15cm. Pinch out growing tip at 10–15cm for bushy multi-stemmed plants. Transplant to 30cm spacing in September–October in full sun with well-drained alkaline soil. Plant tulip bulbs between plants at the same time. Flowers April–May (Year 2) with intense clove fragrance. All parts toxic — keep from children and pets.

Shop Wallflower Cloth of Gold Seeds →