Purple Haze Camellia
Purple Haze Camellia – The Rarest Color in the Camellia World, Blooming When Nothing Else Does
Purple is extraordinarily rare in the camellia world — and the Purple Haze Camellia delivers it in spectacular fashion. Its large, fully double, rose-form blooms in deep purple-red to burgundy-violet appear from late fall through early spring, filling the winter garden with a color so unusual and so rich that it stops people in their tracks. Paired with glossy, deep-green evergreen foliage that looks impeccable year-round, Purple Haze is one of the most distinctive and conversation-worthy shrubs you can plant.
Why Purple Haze Stands Apart
- Exceptionally rare bloom color – Deep purple-red to burgundy-violet double blooms — among the darkest, most unusual colors available in any camellia variety. A genuine collector’s plant.
- Fall-through-spring bloom season – Flowers from late October through March depending on zone — delivering rich color during the months when the garden needs it most.
- Fully double, rose-form flowers – Densely petaled blooms with a formal, peony-like structure that holds up beautifully even in cool, wet winter weather.
- Evergreen year-round – Glossy, deep-green foliage provides structure, privacy, and lush texture through all four seasons.
- Shade-tolerant – Thrives in partial shade, making it ideal for north-facing beds, woodland gardens, and spots under tree canopies where few winter-blooming shrubs succeed.
- Versatile form – Works as a specimen shrub, informal hedge, foundation planting, or container plant for patios and covered porches.
- Long-lived – Camellias are among the most enduring garden shrubs, often thriving for decades with proper siting and minimal care.
Ideal Uses
- Specimen focal point in shade or partial shade gardens
- Foundation planting along north- or east-facing walls
- Informal flowering hedge or privacy screen
- Woodland garden anchor or mixed shrub border
- Container planting for covered patios and porches
- Cut flower garden — the dramatic blooms make stunning winter arrangements
Picture a gray January afternoon — your garden stripped of color — and then the Purple Haze Camellia, covered in those extraordinary deep purple-red blooms, glowing like jewels against the dark evergreen foliage. It’s the plant that makes winter gardeners genuinely excited. There is simply nothing else like it.
Growing Guide
- Zones: USDA 7–10
- Light: Partial shade to filtered sun; avoid harsh afternoon sun which can scorch foliage and bleach blooms
- Water: Keep soil consistently moist, especially during establishment and bloom season. Do not allow to dry out completely.
- Soil: Acidic, humus-rich, well-draining soil (pH 5.5–6.5). Amend with peat moss or pine bark at planting.
- Mulch: Apply 2–3 inches of pine bark or pine straw to retain moisture, regulate soil temperature, and maintain acidity.
- Fertilizer: Feed with an acid-forming camellia/azalea fertilizer in spring after blooming ends. Do not fertilize in fall or winter.
- Pruning: Prune lightly immediately after blooming ends in late winter/early spring. Avoid pruning in fall, which removes developing flower buds.
- Mature size: 6–10 ft. tall, 4–6 ft. wide (slow-growing; easily maintained smaller)
Love Camellias? Compare Varieties
For a striking two-tone alternative, check out the Dream Weaver Camellia — a stunning variety with deep pink-lavender centers and bright white outer petals, blooming on the same fall-to-winter schedule for a complementary display or a side-by-side color contrast.
Original: $99.95
-65%$99.95
$34.98

Description
Purple Haze Camellia – The Rarest Color in the Camellia World, Blooming When Nothing Else Does
Purple is extraordinarily rare in the camellia world — and the Purple Haze Camellia delivers it in spectacular fashion. Its large, fully double, rose-form blooms in deep purple-red to burgundy-violet appear from late fall through early spring, filling the winter garden with a color so unusual and so rich that it stops people in their tracks. Paired with glossy, deep-green evergreen foliage that looks impeccable year-round, Purple Haze is one of the most distinctive and conversation-worthy shrubs you can plant.
Why Purple Haze Stands Apart
- Exceptionally rare bloom color – Deep purple-red to burgundy-violet double blooms — among the darkest, most unusual colors available in any camellia variety. A genuine collector’s plant.
- Fall-through-spring bloom season – Flowers from late October through March depending on zone — delivering rich color during the months when the garden needs it most.
- Fully double, rose-form flowers – Densely petaled blooms with a formal, peony-like structure that holds up beautifully even in cool, wet winter weather.
- Evergreen year-round – Glossy, deep-green foliage provides structure, privacy, and lush texture through all four seasons.
- Shade-tolerant – Thrives in partial shade, making it ideal for north-facing beds, woodland gardens, and spots under tree canopies where few winter-blooming shrubs succeed.
- Versatile form – Works as a specimen shrub, informal hedge, foundation planting, or container plant for patios and covered porches.
- Long-lived – Camellias are among the most enduring garden shrubs, often thriving for decades with proper siting and minimal care.
Ideal Uses
- Specimen focal point in shade or partial shade gardens
- Foundation planting along north- or east-facing walls
- Informal flowering hedge or privacy screen
- Woodland garden anchor or mixed shrub border
- Container planting for covered patios and porches
- Cut flower garden — the dramatic blooms make stunning winter arrangements
Picture a gray January afternoon — your garden stripped of color — and then the Purple Haze Camellia, covered in those extraordinary deep purple-red blooms, glowing like jewels against the dark evergreen foliage. It’s the plant that makes winter gardeners genuinely excited. There is simply nothing else like it.
Growing Guide
- Zones: USDA 7–10
- Light: Partial shade to filtered sun; avoid harsh afternoon sun which can scorch foliage and bleach blooms
- Water: Keep soil consistently moist, especially during establishment and bloom season. Do not allow to dry out completely.
- Soil: Acidic, humus-rich, well-draining soil (pH 5.5–6.5). Amend with peat moss or pine bark at planting.
- Mulch: Apply 2–3 inches of pine bark or pine straw to retain moisture, regulate soil temperature, and maintain acidity.
- Fertilizer: Feed with an acid-forming camellia/azalea fertilizer in spring after blooming ends. Do not fertilize in fall or winter.
- Pruning: Prune lightly immediately after blooming ends in late winter/early spring. Avoid pruning in fall, which removes developing flower buds.
- Mature size: 6–10 ft. tall, 4–6 ft. wide (slow-growing; easily maintained smaller)
Love Camellias? Compare Varieties
For a striking two-tone alternative, check out the Dream Weaver Camellia — a stunning variety with deep pink-lavender centers and bright white outer petals, blooming on the same fall-to-winter schedule for a complementary display or a side-by-side color contrast.






















