Annual Pollinator AGM

Nigella 'Miss Jekyll' Blue (Love-in-a-mist)

Nigella damascena 'Miss Jekyll' Blue -- Love-in-a-Mist; RHS AGM

£2.10approx. 400 seeds

Clear sky-blue semi-double flowers nestled in a "mist" of fine ferny foliage — the classic cottage Nigella named after Gertrude Jekyll. RHS AGM. Decorative dried pods.

Sowing months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Height
45cm-50cm
Spread
25cm
Spacing
20cm
Position
Full sun
Soil
Thrives in well-drained, average to poor soil
Grow guide
How to grow Nigella 'Miss Jekyll' Blue (Love-in-a-mist)
Read the full guide →
About this variety

Nigella damascena 'Miss Jekyll' Blue Love-in-a-Mist 'Miss Jekyll' Blue

The classic cottage garden Nigella — the variety that defined the genus and against which all other Love-in-a-Mist are measured. Clear sky-blue semi-double flowers nestled within a misty ruff of fine, thread-fine, feathery green foliage, named after the legendary British garden designer Gertrude Jekyll, who famously used it to soften the edges of her formal borders. RHS Award of Garden Merit holder.

This is the Nigella that started it all. Gertrude Jekyll selected this clear sky-blue form from variable seed stocks in the early 20th century and gave her name to the variety that has been the cottage garden's classic Love-in-a-Mist for over a hundred years. Each flower is a perfect semi-double in clear sky-blue, the petals sitting nestled within a characteristic "ruff" of fine, thread-like, feathery green bracts — the famous "mist" that gives the genus its romantic common name. Reaching 45–60cm in height. Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit — recognition reserved only for plants of consistently outstanding garden performance. Listed on RHS Plants for Pollinators. Produces minimal pollen, making it allergy-friendly. Deer resistant. Hardy annual.

The two-act performance: the show doesn't end when the petals fall. The centre of each flower swells into a magnificent balloon-like seed pod, striped with purple and green, that stands tall through autumn. These architectural pods are one of the most sought-after elements for dried flower arranging — they dry magnificently and last for months in winter arrangements.

A note on growing

Nigella is genuinely one of the easiest "scatter and grow" seeds. Direct sow only — Nigella has a sensitive taproot and resents transplanting. Sow direct outdoors in September for early flowers the following year, or March–May for summer blooms. Autumn sowing produces stronger, earlier-flowering plants. Scatter seeds onto finely raked soil and cover lightly (3mm deep). Germination 14–21 days.

Full sun (light shade tolerated). Average garden soil or even gravel — they don't need feeding. Rich soil produces more "mist" (leaves) and fewer "jewels" (flowers) — keep them lean for the most generous flowering. Maintenance is minimal: no staking required. If you want the seed pods for drying, leave the flowers to set seed naturally. If you want more flowers and a longer season, deadhead regularly. Self-seeds reliably; volunteer plants appear in subsequent years.

Where it shines

At the feet of shrub roses — Nigella 'Miss Jekyll' Blue is the classical companion underplanting for cottage roses, the soft blue mist of flowers and foliage covering bare soil and hiding the leggy thorny stems beautifully. In cottage borders for the quintessential romantic English summer look. As an "edge softener" along formal border edges — Gertrude Jekyll's original design use, where the misty foliage blurs the lines between formal planting and informal cottage character. In the cutting garden for romantic posies. As an architectural autumn seed-pod plant. In wildlife gardens for the high pollinator value.

Plant alongside

The classic combination: pair 'Miss Jekyll' Blue with shrub roses for the timeless English cottage rose-and-Nigella underplanting. For a warm cottage scheme, combine with Calendula 'Art Shades Mixed' — the apricot-and-cream of the Calendula provides a warm solid contrast to the cool airy blues of the Nigella. With Cornflower 'Blue Ball' for an all-blue cottage carpet at slightly different heights.

Plant alongside

Nigella 'Miss Jekyll' Blue (Love-in-a-mist) pairs beautifully with these cottage garden classics

RHS Plants for Pollinators

This plant has been assessed by the Royal Horticultural Society and recommended as especially beneficial to bees, butterflies and other pollinators. Growing plants like this directly supports UK pollinator populations — something close to our hearts at Salle Moor Hall Farm, where we see the difference a cottage garden full of the right plants can make.

Learn more at RHS.org.uk →

RHS Award of Garden Merit

The RHS Award of Garden Merit is given to plants of outstanding excellence for ordinary garden use. To earn this award a plant must be of good constitution, available to the gardening public, and perform reliably across a range of UK growing conditions. It is one of the most trusted plant recommendations in British gardening and a genuine mark of quality.

Learn more at RHS.org.uk →