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Description
pink variegated indoor plants Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' – Foliage FactoryAlocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' brings dark, matte reginula leaves into a softer colour range with pale main veins and irregular cream to blush pink markings that shift from leaf to leaf. The plant keeps the small, corm forming structure of the reginula group, with close up texture, vein contrast and changing colour detail in a low base. Each plant can produce a different balance of dark green tissue, pale
Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated'
Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' brings dark, matte reginula leaves into a softer colour range with pale main veins and irregular cream to blush-pink markings that shift from leaf to leaf. The plant keeps the small, corm-forming structure of the reginula group, with close-up texture, vein contrast and changing colour detail in a low base.
Each plant can produce a different balance of dark green tissue, pale cream, muted blush and occasional warmer pink areas. Greener leaves maintain steadier growth, while paler sectors create softer contrast and can mark faster after stress.
Velvet texture with blush variegation
This plant develops from a small underground corm with leaves held on short petioles around a central growth point. In indoor pots, it usually remains compact when grown under warm, bright, humid conditions. Older plants may broaden as offsets form, while the overall scale stays low and concentrated.
The leaves are thick, matte and softly velvety to the touch. Their dark surface makes the pale veins stand out, while the pink-variegated pattern appears as broken flecks, cloudy sectors, cream patches or blush-tinted areas. New leaves may open lighter or warmer in colour and then settle as the blade firms. Large pale areas contain less chlorophyll, so strongly variegated leaves can grow more slowly and may mark faster than darker leaves.
The pattern is naturally uneven. A plant may produce a strongly marked leaf after a greener one, and offsets from corms can vary in colour balance. Light keeps growth steady and the pattern visible, while the actual distribution of variegation remains part of the plant’s cultivated variation.
Reginula context and pink patterning
The species behind this plant, Alocasia reginula, is a small Araceae species associated with Borneo. It is known in cultivation for dark matte blades, pale veins, compact habit and thick leaves that feel more substantial than many thin-leaved Alocasia. The pink-variegated plant keeps that reginula structure and adds irregular pale colouring across the leaf surface.
This small corm-forming Alocasia develops through compact basal growth. The base needs warmth and oxygen around the corm, and the leaves need filtered light and humid air during expansion. A snug, airy container lets the substrate cycle between moisture and oxygen.
Light, moisture and substrate for patterned leaves
Give Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' a bright exposure with direct sun softened, such as an east-facing window, a softened south or west exposure, or a grow-light position with gentle intensity. Direct midday sun can scar pale sectors quickly, especially where leaves sit close to glass. Very dim positions slow growth, produce smaller leaves and reduce the plant’s ability to maintain a full base.
Water when the upper 40–60% of the pot has dried, then let excess water leave freely. Aim for an evenly rehydrated substrate followed by a clear dry-down, with air returning to the base between waterings. In a warm room with active growth, this may mean more frequent watering; in winter, cooler conditions or lower light, the interval naturally lengthens.
Use a structured aroid substrate with fine to medium bark, coco chips or coir, perlite, pumice and a modest organic fraction. The mix holds some moisture while keeping air around the corm. A pot with drainage holes is essential, and a container only slightly larger than the current root mass gives the plant a balanced cycle of moisture retention and oxygen.
Keep temperatures mostly between 20–28 °C, with a warm minimum above 18 °C for active growth. Humidity around 60–80% helps new leaves unfurl with fewer dry edges, especially on paler tissue. Gentle airflow keeps humid conditions fresh. Feed lightly in the growing season with a diluted balanced fertiliser every few waterings; reduce feeding when the plant slows, rests or produces very little new growth.
Repot when roots fill the pot or the substrate begins to compact. Keep the corm and small offsets intact where possible, as reginula-group Alocasia can pause after root disturbance. Propagation is mainly by corms or offsets. Each young plant may carry a different amount of variegation, so the next generation can show darker, paler or differently marked leaves.
Pale sectors and corm health
Brown or tan marks on pink and cream tissue often come from direct sun, low humidity during expansion, mineral build-up or a short period of root stress. Check the newest leaves, the substrate moisture and the light angle before changing several conditions at once. Moving the plant slightly back from the window and refreshing the dry-down timing often improves the next leaf.
Yellowing on the oldest leaf can appear as the plant redirects energy into a new leaf or offset. Yellowing that spreads through several leaves at once points toward a moisture or temperature issue. A soft base, sour substrate smell or collapsing petioles call for a root check, removal of damaged tissue and a smaller volume of fresh airy substrate around the remaining corm.
Dry, stuck or torn new leaves are usually caused by low humidity, interrupted watering or mechanical damage during unfurling. Keep expanding leaves free from tight contact with shelves, glass and other pots. Thrips and mites can mark the velvety surface, so inspect the underside of leaves and the newest growth regularly. A lint roller, shower rinse or careful wipe can damage delicate texture, so use gentle cleaning methods.
Handling pink-variegated reginula
Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals typical of many Araceae. Chewed leaves or stems can irritate the mouth, lips, tongue and digestive tract. Keep the plant away from pets and small children, and wash hands after pruning, removing damaged leaves or handling corms and cut tissue.
Pink-variegated reginula foliage
Alocasia reginula was published as a species in 1998 and belongs to the aroid family, Araceae. The epithet reginula comes from Latin regina, meaning queen, with the diminutive sense of a small queen. This plant shows cream to blush markings on dark reginula leaves.
Dark velvet leaves with blush-to-cream markings give Alocasia reginula 'Pink Variegated' its soft variegated contrast.
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