Deptford pink (Dianthus armeria) flowers. Top row: oblique views of an unusually hairy bloom (left) and a bloom with the two long styles extended (right). Bottom row: a bloom showing stamens (left) and two blooms with buds in various stages of development (right).
Deptford pink flowers are 1/4-1/2″ across with hairy petals that are pink with white dots, 10 stamens with purplish-pink anthers, and two 1 cm long, filamentous styles; the rounded tips of the petals are toothed. The calyx is long (3/4″) relative to the size of the corolla, tubular, and hairy with five thin extensions; narrow bracts lie more or less parallel to the elongated calyx. No other local flower looks anything like Deptford pinks.
Deptford pink (Dianthus armeria) stems and leaves; note the swollen attachments of the leaves to the stems.
Deptford pink leaves are hairy, very slender (about 1/8″) and long (about 3″), sessile, with bases of leaf pairs that wrap around the stem, forming a swollen, hairy sheath.
Deptford pink (Dianthus armeria) flowering stem with leaves (left) and the top of the plant with buds and flowers (right).
Deptford pink is a tall (1-2.5 feet), slender herbaceous plant; stems are green, round in section, hairless except for a patch of white hairs beneath each (opposite) pair of leaves. This species is a European exotic that has escaped from cultivation.
