indoor black leaf plant Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' – Foliage Factory
SKU: 32386637752
indoor black leaf plant

indoor black leaf plant Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' – Foliage Factory

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Description

indoor black leaf plant Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' – Foliage FactoryAlocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' is a compact reginula form with dark matte leaves, crisp pale veins and a tidy base that stays small enough for shelves and plant cabinets. The leaves feel dense and velvety, the veins sit sharply raised in pale contrast, and petioles remain close together. Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' grows slowly and develops its dark leaves in a compact sequence. A young or recently shipped plant

Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet'

Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' is a compact reginula form with dark matte leaves, crisp pale veins and a tidy base that stays small enough for shelves and plant cabinets. The leaves feel dense and velvety, the veins sit sharply raised in pale contrast, and petioles remain close together.

Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' grows slowly and develops its dark leaves in a compact sequence. A young or recently shipped plant may carry only a few active leaves; a firm base and clean new growth show that the plant has re-established. With warmth, filtered light and measured watering, the plant produces compact dark leaves on shorter petioles.

Dark velvet leaves and small-pot growth

Black Velvet grows as a compact terrestrial aroid with leaves rising from a short central growth point. Petioles stay relatively close together, and the plant usually remains around 25–45 cm in indoor culture. The leaves are small to medium, ovate to shield-like and noticeably thick, with a matte surface that can look almost black once mature.

  • Leaf shape: ovate to shield-like blades with a short, close-growing Alocasia profile.
  • Leaf colour: deep green to near black once leaves harden, especially in bright filtered conditions.
  • Veins: pale primary veins create sharp relief across the dark surface.
  • Texture: velvety surfaces need gentle cleaning and airflow after rinsing.
  • Base: a short corm-like base produces new petioles close together.

Reginula origin and compact growth

Alocasia reginula belongs to Araceae and was first published by A. Hay in 1998. Botanical records list its native range as likely Borneo, where this species belongs to the wet tropical Alocasia world.

A small plant with fine roots needs warmth, oxygen and careful pot sizing. A snug, breathable pot lets the plant use water at an even pace, while excess wet substrate around the base can slow roots and soften petiole bases.

Bright shade and root warmth

In a bright position with softened light, Black Velvet stays compact and new leaves harden with a clean dark finish. Around 10,000–20,000 lux is a clear indoor guide where light can be measured. Harsh direct sun can burn the dark surface, while deep shade encourages stretched petioles and smaller leaves.

  • Temperature: aim for active growth around 18–29 °C and protect the pot from cold glass or draughts.
  • Humidity: 60–80% lets new leaves expand smoothly and reduces crisping along young edges.
  • Watering: water once the pot has dried around 40–60% through, then drain thoroughly.
  • Air movement: gentle airflow refreshes humid cabinets and lets the substrate lighten between waterings.
  • Fertilising: use mild fertiliser in the growing season after roots are functioning and new leaves are forming.

Watering should follow pot weight, base firmness and drying speed. A heavy pot for many days indicates low water use, low warmth or an oversized container. A very light pot with drooping petioles indicates thirst or roots that are still rebuilding after stress.

Fine roots, snug pots and substrate

Black Velvet needs a substrate that holds a little moisture while retaining air spaces. Small bark, mineral aeration and a fine moisture-buffering base give fine roots moisture contact and air. Dense universal soil used alone can sit damp around the base; very coarse mixes can dry unevenly and leave fine roots with poor contact.

Repot when roots have filled the pot, the substrate has collapsed or watering has become difficult to balance. Move up by one small pot size and maintain the base level with the surface. Newly repotted plants need warmth and consistent moisture checks while roots settle into the fresh mix.

Mineral and semi-hydro substrates can be used for Black Velvet if the plant is moved while actively growing. Use a shallow reservoir, the pot warm and the base above the wet zone. New mineral roots take time to form; during conversion, maintain warmth around the pot, provide airflow and use a careful water level.

Leaf ageing, pauses and regrowth

Small indoor Alocasia often replace older leaves as new ones develop. A single yellowing lower leaf can be part of normal turnover after shipping, repotting or seasonal change. More serious concern comes from a soft base, sour substrate, repeated collapse after watering or several leaves declining at once.

Black Velvet can also pause during winter or after transport. During that pause, the corm may rebuild roots before producing visible new growth. Maintain warmth around the plant, provide filtered brightness and water only when the pot has dried enough to take moisture again.

Leaf cleaning and long-term shape

Velvet leaves show dust, water marks and pest stippling easily. Clean them with a soft brush, a gentle rinse or careful spot-cleaning, then let them dry with airflow. Polishing sprays and heavy rubbing can damage the surface, and crowded placement can bend new petioles before the leaf opens fully.

  • Rotate the pot occasionally once a new leaf has hardened, so growth stays balanced.
  • Leave space around the base for new petioles to rise cleanly.
  • Remove spent leaves cleanly with sterile scissors after they have mostly yellowed.
  • Inspect the underside and petiole bases during watering, especially in warm cabinets.
  • Refresh old substrate when it compacts and dries unevenly.

Root diagnosis in Black Velvet

  • Brown dry edges: check humidity, heat near glass and repeated deep dry-downs.
  • Limp leaves in wet mix: move the plant warmer, improve drainage and inspect roots if the base softens.
  • Small new leaves: increase usable light and warmth before changing fertiliser strength.
  • Pale stretched petioles: move the plant closer to filtered light or adjust grow-light distance.
  • Fine stippling: check for spider mites or thrips, isolate the plant and treat early.

Outdoor time should be brief in European conditions. A sheltered summer position in bright shade can suit an established plant during warm nights, but rain, wind and cool temperatures quickly make small-base care harder. Use indoor culture as the regular growing environment.

Small dark foliage at home

Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet' is toxic to pets that chew plants. Biting the foliage can irritate the mouth, throat and stomach.

Reginula and Black Velvet

Alocasia reginula was first published in Gardens’ Bulletin Singapore in 1998. The specific epithet reginula comes from Latin regina and means “little queen”, referring to the compact habit and clear dark foliage. Black Velvet is the cultivated name for the dark velvety form associated with this species.

Warmth, filtered light and a snug pot give the plant compact dark leaves with sharp pale veins.

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SKU: 32386637752

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A fae centered Arthurian tale unlike any I’ve read so far. The author did a great job at descriptive world building, with scenes easily playing out in my minds eye. There was plenty of action, suspense, and even a touch of horror. An enemies to lovers, slow burn romance, a quest, with plot twist and turns aplenty. There was a love triangle, which I’m not usually a fan of but, it played out well in this story line. The FMC, Morgan Pendragon, was so blatantly naïve, yet I typically expect as much in a ‘book one’ of a series, especially one that features a fairly sheltered princess. I was happy to read that in spite of this, she still showed a strong sense of morals, fire, and spine. Now our MMC? Kairos Draven, aka Void’s Edge. Oh, how I’m a sucker for a smoking’ hot grumpy warrior alpha with a witty mouth, and a strong sense of “touch her and die” attitude, so you know who held all my cards. That ending? Just made me swoon all the harder. Now add a battlecat that rivals the size of a horse…and well Ms. Briar Boleyn you have well and truly stolen my heart. I’m excited to see where the story goes from here, and follow along to see more of the characters growth. I went into this story fairly blind, and I think I enjoyed it all the more because of it. Once the story got going, it had me in an absolute chokehold and it was difficult to put down.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Ariel
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 3
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3 stars Thank you Netgalley and Briar Boleyn for the ARC! A camelot/king Arthur retelling with fae. I was hooked by the idea of this book immediately and was eager to jump into this world. • slow burn • enemies to lovers • who did this to you Morgan Pendragon watched her mother die by her father's hand when she was just eight years old, hiding under the bed. Morgan is believed to have the tainted blood of the fae in her veins and is cast aside so that her fathers illegitimate son, Arthur, can become the king. She's seen his cruel treatment of the fae firsthand, so when he sends her on a journey to find a fae weapon she seizes the opportunity to do more with her life. Along the way, she finds more than she could have imagined. I don't know a whole lot about King Arthur and Camelot but I had a lot of fun with this story! The plot has some similar tropes to popular romantasy books (From blood and ash) but there's enough originality here that it doesn't feel like I'm reading a copy. I liked how the fae were different in appearance than what is typical in most fantasy books I've read. In this book they have blue hair, violet skin and a wide range of other characteristics. I thought that the world building was easy to follow and I could easily immerse myself into this world. After reading the blurb I kept wondering when she was going to go on the journey to find Excalibur and it doesn't happen until around the 45% mark. The story is a bit slow at times but starts to pick up once they begin their journey to find Excalibur. The John Wick style Inn was a fun concept that I enjoyed reading about. There are a lot of similarities to this and FBAA and I would have liked to have it be a little more different, but I'm hoping book two will have the story turn into something of its own. Overall I enjoyed reading this story and I'm looking forward to reading book two especially after that ending.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2023
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Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2025
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★★★★★ 4
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