From adorable to dazzling, here are the best choices for pink tulips you can plant now for a gorgeous spring flower garden.
Virichic Pink Tulips
The beautiful lily-shaped flowers that are striped in fresh pink and green make borders and designs look better. Long-blooming pink tulips keep the season going until May. They look great in a vase and do well in the garden.
Angélique
“Angelique,” which looks like an old rose, was a favorite of garden designer Rosemary Verey and is White Flower Farm’s best-selling tulip. It has several half-double, curled blooms on each stem. The flowers are a cool pink color with a white base. You can also force it to grow indoors to get a taste of spring early.
Lilac Wonder
This species tulip has beautiful mauve petals and a sunny yellow center. It blooms for a long time and is easy to tuck around plants, in a rock garden, or in a pot. It blooms in May and looks beautiful with daffodils like Narcissus ‘Hawera’ that are also very small.
Pretty Princess
Can’t decide between pink flowers that are warm or cool? “Pretty Princess” is a real sunset of lilac, salmon, and merlot flames, and those are just the flowers that bloom in March and April.
Their many-colored flowers in March and April make them a great way to combine colors that aren’t going well together. Plant enough to cut for bouquets. The flower is strong when cut, and the roots can handle spring rains.
Pink Impression
Beautiful stems and big cup-shaped blooms in a clear rose pink that goes with everything. This is the perfect pink tulip for flower arrangers. Statuesque Darwin crosses are good gardeners who can bloom in sun or partial shade and don’t mind windy weather.
Toronto
“Toronto” glows in cerise and has a bronze-green base for extra sparkle. Each stem is a tiny bouquet. This cherry-pink tulip and blue glory of the snow Chinidoxa luciliae look great together in the yard.
Fancy Frills
This pink tulip is a sweet treat with fringes and a bright rose tracing a white base. ‘Fancy Frills’ adds a striking edge to spring borders and flowers.
Janis Joplin
With a tie-dye of lavender-pink, apricot, and steely blue that goes well with other spring pastels in the yard, “Janis Joplin” is just as memorable as her namesake. Darwin hybrid tulips are bigger than Triumph tulips, but their roots are just as strong to stand up to wind and rain.
Menton
Chameleon dancing between pink, salmon, and apricot depending on the light, and the day, ‘Menton’ shimmers in the May garden.
Apricot Parrot
This parrot flower has petals that are cupped and scalloped and have flames of apricot, cream, rose, magenta, yellow, and green. The color of each flower is different, and some are even crazier than the others.