Annual

Antirrhinum Lucky Lips

Antirrhinum majus 'Lucky Lips'

£2.30approx. 500 seeds

Striking white-and-magenta bicolour blooms on tall 60cm stems — the Fleuroselect-winning snapdragon that stops cottage garden visitors in their tracks.

Sowing months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Height
45–60cm
Spread
30cm
Spacing
25cm
Position
Full sun
Grow guide
How to grow Antirrhinum Lucky Lips
Read the full guide →
About this variety

Antirrhinum majus 'Lucky Lips' Snapdragon 'Lucky Lips'

Striking white-and-magenta bicolour blooms on tall, strong, upright 60cm stems — the Fleuroselect-winning snapdragon that makes people stop and look twice in any cottage border, and one of the most productive cut flowers you can grow from a single seed packet.

'Lucky Lips' won the Fleuroselect Novelty Award — a prize given by the European seed industry only to varieties that introduce a genuinely new characteristic — for the strikingly consistent bicolour pattern: clean white upper petals divided sharply from a saturated magenta-purple lip, maintained with exceptional uniformity across plants. Open-pollinated rather than F1 hybrid, which means seed saved from your own plants comes virtually true the following year. At 60cm, it is one of the taller snapdragons in the range, with strong upright stems that need no staking and a long flowering season from June through to October. RHS Plants for Pollinators recognised.

A note on growing

Sow indoors from January to April for spring planting, or — and this is the gardener's secret — sow in August or September and overwinter young plants in a cold frame for significantly superior plants the following season. Surface-sow at 20–22°C; the seeds need light to germinate. Germination takes 10–14 days. Pinch out the growing tip at 10cm to multiply your cutting stems. Plant out after the last frost (or in autumn for overwintering) in full sun and well-drained soil. Three rules define success: surface-sow without covering, pinch out at 10cm, and always carry cut stems upright in water — antirrhinum stems are geotropic and curve permanently when laid horizontally.

Where it shines

In the cutting garden first and foremost, where the dramatic bicolour and the tall straight stems make it one of the most striking single-stem flowers in any summer bouquet. In the cottage border, plant in groups of three to five for proper visual impact — single plants get lost. The colour combination works equally well in a romantic pastel scheme and in bolder, more vivid plantings. Long vase life with the right handling.

Plant alongside

For drama and contrast, pair with the crimson tassels of Amaranthus 'Love-Lies-Bleeding' and the white lace of Ammi majus. For a softer scheme, combine with Antirrhinum 'DoubleShot Peach' and the soft tones of Achillea 'Pastel Mixed'. The white-and-magenta bicolour also works beautifully alongside silver-leaved Lychnis coronaria.

Plant alongside

Antirrhinum Lucky Lips pairs beautifully with these cottage garden classics