Caladium Varieties

Caladium varieties are often grouped in ways that look tidy on paper, but feel confusing in real life. Leaf shape, color patterns, size, and light tolerance overlap more than most labels suggest — especially when plants are grown indoors or in containers.

This page is not a definitive catalog. It’s a way to explore caladium varieties by how they’re commonly recognized and experienced: what they look like, how they tend to grow, and what stands out after living with them for a while. Photos, quick IDs, and short care snapshots are included to help you compare — not to lock you into a single “right” choice.

Caladium Varieties Explained Leaf Types, Color Patterns & Size Differences

Caladium Varieties Chart: A Quick Way to Compare Common Types

I use this chart as a starting point, not as a final identification tool. Caladium leaves can change with light, leaf age, tuber size, season, and growing conditions. In containers, the same variety may look softer, smaller, darker, or more patterned than it does in seller photos.

The easiest way for me to compare caladium varieties is to look at four things together: main color, leaf shape, growth size, and how the plant behaves in a pot. Names help, but the mature leaves usually tell me more.

VarietyMain LookLeaf / Growth TypeWhat I Notice in Containers
CandidumWhite with green veinsFancy-leaf, classic white typeBest judged by mature leaves; can look softer indoors.
White ChristmasWhite with stronger green veiningFancy-leafMore patterned than a plain white caladium.
White QueenWhite with red veinsFancy-leafMore dramatic than quiet white varieties.
AaronWhite center with green edgeFancy-leafClean, structured, and usually easy to recognize.
Florida MoonlightSoft white to pale greenFancy-leafCalmer and less contrast-heavy than many white types.
Pink SymphonySoft pinkStrap-leaf, compactUseful for small spaces and softer color.
Pink SplashPink and green splash patternFancy-leafMore movement and pattern than a plain pink variety.
Pink BeautySoft translucent pinkFancy-leafCan look gentle rather than bold; better with enough light.
Florida SweetheartBright pinkStrap-leaf, compactGood for smaller pots and tighter spaces.
Carolyn WhortonPink with stronger red veinsFancy-leafUsually has a bigger, stronger visual presence.
Strawberry StarWhite with pink specklesFancy-leafPattern can vary from leaf to leaf.
Red FlashBold red with green and specklesFancy-leaf, large presenceOne of the stronger red caladiums in containers.
Red RufflesRed, smaller leavesStrap-leaf, compactBetter for small-space red color than larger red types.
Postman JoynerDeep red with green edgeFancy-leafCan look darker and more mature as leaves age.
Frieda HempleClean red center with green marginFancy-leafClassic red-and-green look; cleaner than darker red types.
Miss MuffetGreen with red specklesCompact / strap-like impressionSmall, playful, and useful as a contrast plant.
Frog in a BlenderGreen speckled patternUnusual patterned typeMore about texture and pattern than bright color.

By Leaf Type

Leaf shape is one of the easiest ways to compare caladiums at a glance, but I do not treat it as a strict care rule. Indoors, pot size, light, and tuber strength can change the way a variety looks just as much as its label.

Fancy Leaf Caladiums

Fancy leaf caladiums usually have broader, heart-shaped leaves and often create a fuller, more dramatic look in containers. I pay attention to mature leaf size, how upright the petioles stay, and whether the plant still looks balanced after several leaves open.

Strap Leaf Caladiums

Strap leaf caladiums usually have narrower leaves and a more compact, layered habit. I like comparing them for smaller pots, tighter shelves, and places where a large fancy leaf type would take up too much space.

Large-Growing Caladiums

By Color Pattern

Color is often what draws people to caladiums first, but it’s also where variation shows up most. These groupings highlight dominant color patterns to make visual comparison easier.


Red and Black Caladium Varieties

Dark red and black caladiums are not always truly black. Many look burgundy, smoky red, purple-black, or dark-veined depending on light, leaf age, and seller photos. This guide compares 18 dark caladium names and explains what I would check before buying one.

Explore Red and Black Caladiums
Red and Black Caladiums 18 Dark Varieties I Would Check First

White Caladium Varieties

White caladiums are not just “white leaves.” Some are crisp and green-veined, some look creamy, and some carry soft pink marks or translucent patches. I compare them by more than color alone, especially how their pale leaves behave indoors under real light, watering, and seasonal changes.

Explore White Caladiums
White Caladiums Look Simple Until You Compare Them Side by Side

Pink Caladium Varieties

Pink caladiums are not all soft pastel plants. Some stay pale and delicate, while others turn bright pink, red-pink, or heavily speckled as the leaves mature. I compare them by color, pattern stability, leaf strength, and how well they hold their look indoors.

Explore Pink Caladiums
Pink Caladium Varieties: 12 That Look Similar at First

Red Caladium Varieties

Green and Speckled Caladium Varieties

Some caladiums appear again and again for a reason. This section groups widely grown cultivars for quick reference rather than ranking or recommendation.



Sun Tolerance & Growth Habit

I am careful with the phrase “sun-tolerant” because it can mean different things in different homes. A caladium that handles bright outdoor shade or morning sun may still scorch behind hot glass indoors. In containers, I judge light tolerance by how the leaves hold color, whether the edges burn, and whether the plant keeps producing new growth.

For indoor growing, I care more about stable bright light than harsh direct sun. If natural light is weak, I would rather compare placement and supplemental lighting than push a caladium into a hot window. I explain that indoor side more in my guide to using a grow light for caladiums.

Compact vs Large Caladiums

FAQ

Quick answers to common questions about caladium varieties and naming.

Q1. How many caladium varieties are there?
There are many named caladium varieties in circulation, and the number keeps changing as new commercial lines, regional names, and seller names appear. I do not try to list every name on this page. I focus on varieties that are commonly grown, visually useful for comparison, or connected to my own indoor growing notes.
Q2. Why do the same caladium varieties look different in photos?
Light, leaf age, and growing conditions make a huge difference. A variety grown outdoors in strong sun can look nothing like the same plant grown indoors under indirect light. Photos here are meant for comparison, not exact prediction.
Q3. Are fancy leaf and strap leaf caladiums cared for differently?
Not dramatically, but they often grow differently. Leaf shape tends to influence spacing, visual density, and how the plant fills a pot, which is why separating them can be helpful when choosing varieties.
Q4. Are rare caladium varieties harder to grow?
Not always. Some unusual caladium names grow normally, while others are harder to judge because there are fewer reliable photos or long-term indoor growing notes. I would not assume a variety is difficult just because it is uncommon, but I would be more careful if I only have seller photos to compare.
Q5. What does “sun-tolerant” really mean for caladiums?
It usually means the plant can handle more light than average, not full sun all day. Even sun-tolerant caladiums can scorch under harsh conditions, especially indoors or in containers.
Q6. Is there a best caladium variety for beginners?
There isn’t one single “best” choice. Widely grown, classic cultivars tend to be more forgiving, but success depends more on matching the plant to your light and growing setup than on the name alone.
Explore all Caladium guides →