








Nigella Mulberry Rose (Love-in-a-mist)
Nigella damascena 'Mulberry Rose' -- RHS AGM; RHS Plants for Pollinators
Paper-thin ruffled flowers opening pale pastel pink and deepening to vintage rose-berry — the dusky-pink Nigella with antique porcelain colour evolution.
About this variety
Nigella damascena 'Mulberry Rose' Vintage Pink Love-in-a-Mist 'Mulberry Rose'
A masterpiece of colour evolution — paper-thin ruffled semi-double blooms that open delicate pale pastel pink and deepen as they mature into rich vintage rose-berry tones. Nestled in a ruff of fine ferny foliage, these flowers look like antique porcelain. 'Mulberry Rose' is the romantic dusky-pink Nigella for cottage gardeners who want quietly sophisticated colour over the brash classic blues.
If you find the standard blue Nigella a little too "wild" or too obvious, 'Mulberry Rose' is the variety to grow. This stunning variety produces paper-thin ruffled blooms that open a delicate pale pastel pink and deepen as they mature in the sun, transitioning into a rich vintage rose-berry tone. Unlike most flowers that fade in sunlight, 'Mulberry Rose' actually darkens — which means a single patch looks genuinely dynamic, with old and new flowers mingling at different stages of the colour evolution, creating a multi-tonal romantic effect that few other hardy annuals can match. Nestled in the characteristic ruff of fine ferny foliage, the flowers look like antique porcelain — soft, faded, sophisticated, romantic. Hardy annual (H3–H4).
The two-act performance: as with all Nigellas, the show doesn't end when the petals fall. The centre swells into a magnificent balloon-like seed pod striped in burgundy and green — the colours echoing the deepest mulberry tones of the mature flowers. These pods dry perfectly, providing architectural interest for winter vases and wreaths long after summer has faded. Listed on RHS Plants for Pollinators.
A note on growing
Like all Nigellas, direct sow only — sensitive taproot resents transplanting. Sow direct outdoors in September for early summer flowers, or March–May for summer-long display. Scatter onto raked soil and cover lightly (about 3mm deep). Germination 14–21 days.
Full sun or light shade. Average to lean soil — don't fertilise. Rich soil encourages "mist" (leaves) at the expense of "jewels" (flowers). Maintenance is minimal; Nigella has sturdy stems and rarely needs staking. Choose your priority: for a continuous supply of flowers for the vase, deadhead spent blooms regularly; for the striking burgundy seed pods for drying, leave flowers to set seed naturally.
Self-seeds reliably; volunteer offspring largely retain the pink colouration.
Where it shines
In romantic vintage cottage borders, where the pink-to-mulberry colour evolution creates a soft impressionistic effect across a season. As cut flowers for sophisticated vintage cottage bouquets and weddings — 'Mulberry Rose' brings genuinely uncommon colour to arrangements. In container plantings for refined cottage romance. As autumn architectural seed pods. In wildlife gardens for the high mid-summer pollinator value. As a self-seeding informal colony that brings vintage charm year after year.
Plant alongside
For a fresh romantic cottage cutting scheme, pair 'Mulberry Rose' with Cosmos 'Purity' — the clean white of 'Purity' brightens up the dusky pink tones of the Nigella, creating a light airy romantic cottage garden border. With Briza Maxima (Quaking Grass) — texture harmony at matching heights with contrasting form. For tonal cottage drama, plant alongside Cornflower 'Mauve Boy' (matching vintage palette) and Cynoglossum 'Mystery Rose' (dusty smoky pink filler).
Plant alongside
Nigella Mulberry Rose (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 →



