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Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jun 28 - Jul 3
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
potting mix for alocasia black velvet Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' – Foliage FactoryAlocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' brings yellow gold marbling into the compact Black Velvet look. The plant stays small, base forming and close to the pot, while the leaves carry dark matte green to near black tissue, pale vein relief and warm gold patterning that shifts from leaf to leaf. The gold pattern is naturally uneven. One leaf may show scattered dusting, another may carry a wider yellow green area,
Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold'
Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' brings yellow-gold marbling into the compact Black Velvet look. The plant stays small, base-forming and close to the pot, while the leaves carry dark matte green to near-black tissue, pale vein relief and warm gold patterning that shifts from leaf to leaf.
The gold pattern is naturally uneven. One leaf may show scattered dusting, another may carry a wider yellow-green area, and a later leaf may return to a darker pattern as the plant grows. That variation brings velvety texture, pale veins, dark tissue and gold markings together on a compact Alocasia base.
Gold patterning on dark compact leaves
This plant grows from a short corm-like base, producing petioles in a tight cluster. The leaves are small to medium, thick, velvety and dark, with pale primary veins that stand out strongly against the surface. Gold sectors may appear between veins, along margins or across parts of the blade, giving each new leaf a slightly different balance of dark and warm-toned tissue.
- Plant form: compact terrestrial Alocasia with leaves rising from a central growth point.
- Leaf surface: matte to velvety, with a soft finish that marks more easily than glossy foliage.
- Pattern: gold to yellow-green markings vary by leaf and may appear as marbling, sectors or dusting.
- Indoor size: commonly kept around 25–45 cm, depending on age, pot size and growing conditions.
- Root habit: fine roots close to the base make pot choice, warmth and substrate structure important.
Care for gold-marked foliage
Gold-marked tissue has less green surface than fully dark tissue, so darker leaf sections remain important on a small base. Leave firm darker leaves in place even when they carry less gold. Very pale sections mark more easily; firm darker leaves should stay on the plant while they remain healthy.
Black Velvet Gold combines yellow-toned marbling with compact dark velvet leaves. Individual plants can differ in gold coverage, leaf darkness and vein contrast, with compact Black Velvet structure and warm variegated patterning on the same small base.
Light, warmth and leaf finish
Place Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' in clear indirect light. An east-facing window, warm cabinet or balanced grow light can produce compact growth and leaves well coloured. Direct midday sun can scorch pale sectors and mark the velvety surface; deep shade slows growth and can reduce the plant’s ability to carry patterned leaves.
- Light: screened window light, roughly 10,000–20,000 lux where measured, with protection from hot glass.
- Temperature: 18–29 °C suits active growth; protect the pot from cold windowsills and night drops.
- Humidity: 60–80% lets new leaves open with fewer dry edges, especially on pale areas.
- Air movement: gentle airflow refreshes humid air and lets the pot dry evenly.
- Fertilising: use a diluted balanced fertiliser when new leaves are forming once the plant is taking up water normally.
Velvet leaves need gentle cleaning. Brush away dust lightly or rinse with care, then give the plant airflow while leaves dry. Repeated wiping, polish sprays and rough contact can leave dull areas on the surface.
Watering and substrate for a small corm
Water when the pot has partly dried, usually around 40–60% through the container. Check by pot weight, a wooden stick, a careful finger test near the edge or a moisture meter used as a guide. Water thoroughly, let the mix absorb moisture evenly and drain fully.
Use a fine airy aroid substrate with small bark, mineral particles and a moisture-buffering component. Very coarse mixes can leave fine roots with poor contact, while dense soil can stay wet in the centre after the top looks dry. A compact habit needs a pot close to the root mass, because oversized pots slow the drying phase.
This plant can move into mineral or semi-hydro substrates when it is actively growing and kept warm. Use a shallow water level, strong aeration and a careful transition period. A cold high reservoir can soften fine roots quickly, especially after shipping or repotting.
Acclimation, repotting and pattern changes
After delivery, give the plant time to restart normal water uptake. Provide warmth, bright filtered light and light humidity, then wait before repotting unless the substrate has collapsed or stays wet too long. One older leaf may yellow as a new leaf hardens or as the base adjusts after travel; base firmness, root activity and new growth give the better signal.
Repot once roots have filled the current pot or the mix has compacted enough to hold water too long. Move up by one modest size, set the base at the surface and avoid covering petiole bases with a thick layer of mix. A newly repotted plant may pause before producing a larger leaf.
Gold variegation can shift with each leaf. Remove a fully damaged leaf once it has declined, but leave sound dark leaves in place even if the gold is weaker. A plant that produces very pale, fragile growth needs careful light, warmth and moisture balance while it rebuilds darker tissue.
Stress signs on gold-patterned leaves
- Crisp pale sectors: check heat build-up, direct sun, very dry air and rough handling.
- Soft base: inspect the mix, drainage and pot size; move the plant warmer and reduce excess moisture.
- Tiny new leaves: use warmth and filtered light while roots recover before increasing fertiliser strength.
- Drooping in a light pot: water thoroughly, drain fully and watch whether petioles regain firmness.
- Yellow older leaf: check new growth and base firmness; a single older leaf can age during acclimation.
European outdoor growing should stay very brief. A short summer spell can suit warm, sheltered bright shade with nights above 18 °C and careful rain protection. Bring the plant back under cover before cool nights return.
Handling variegated reginula leaves
Alocasia reginula 'Black Velvet Gold' can cause mouth and throat irritation if chewed. Place it safely away from pets and children, and avoid sap contact after trimming.
Gold patterning on Black Velvet leaves
Alocasia reginula A.Hay belongs to Araceae and was first published in 1998. Botanical records link the species to likely Borneo and a wet tropical biome. The epithet reginula comes from Latin regina and means “little queen”.
The gold pattern develops on a firm compact base with enough dark green leaf surface.
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