Pattern

Although daylily flowers can exhibit a variety of different color features, the term pattern is reserved for a design that goes beyond the basic markings.

A patterned daylily is one that exhibits different colors or variations in hue, value, or saturation in such a way that a design is created. The definition includes, but is not limited to, regular repeating patterns (e.g. flowers exhibiting concentric rings or feathering of color within the eyezone or elsewhere), or irregular random patterns (e.g. flowers exhibiting stippling or variegation such as streaks, spots, patches or stripes).

A pattern must go beyond a solid eye, band, halo, or simple watermark, and the presence of a picotee edge does not make any of these, or an otherwise plain base, into a pattern. Selfs, simple bitones, and simple bicolors are excluded, as are changes in the shape of a solid eyezone color, such as a simple chevron. Simple appliqué throats or contrasting midribs alone are not a pattern, and nor are single-colored throats regardless of how far the color is extended outwards onto the segments.

This definition is intentionally left somewhat open to allow for the inclusion of new variations that may arise in the future.

The AHS annually presents the R. W. Munson Award for the best patterned cultivar as voted on by AHS Garden Judges.

Variegated seedling, photo by Mike Holmes, used with permission

‘Get Jiggy'(Stamile 2008) Shows multi-banded violet eye. Photo by Oliver Billingslea, used with permission

‘Cosmic Kaleidoscope’ (Carpenter-J. 2006) Shows mascara band around watermark. Photo by Julie Covington, used with permission

‘Blue Beetle’ (Gossard 2010) Shows mascara band around bluish band. Photo by Julie Covington, used with permission

‘Spacecoast Freaky Tiki’ (Kinnebrew-J. 2006) Described as stippled or speckled. Photo by Tim Fehr, used with permission

‘Spotted Fever’ (Brown-Oakes 1995) Described as stippled or speckled. Photo by Gus Guzinski, used with permission

‘Screen Pattern’ (Stamile 2005) shows multicolored eye. Photo by Oliver Billingslea, used with permission.

‘Neusa Bergemann’ (Hansen 2003) Shows watermark and eye combination. Photo by Julie Covington, used with permission

‘Winter Wolf’ (Abajian 2005) Shows patterned eye with veining. Photo by Julie Covington, used with permission

Maryott seedling showing an applique within the patterned eyezone.  Photo by Bill Maryott. Used with permission

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The American Daylily Society