silver indoor plant Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' – Foliage Factory
SKU: 81497969933
silver indoor plant

silver indoor plant Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' – Foliage Factory

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Description

silver indoor plant Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' – Foliage FactoryAlocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' is a compact terrestrial Alocasia with thick, shield like leaves, dark green veins and cool silver grey panels across a raised surface. The plant grows from a short rhizome and carries a small plant of upright leaves, so its scale comes from close up detail: firm leaf tissue, carved venation and pale interveinal colour. Published material describes Alocasia baginda as a small herb

Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon'

Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' is a compact terrestrial Alocasia with thick, shield-like leaves, dark green veins and cool silver-grey panels across a raised surface. The plant grows from a short rhizome and carries a small plant of upright leaves, so its scale comes from close-up detail: firm leaf tissue, carved venation and pale interveinal colour.

Published material describes Alocasia baginda as a small herb around 25–30 cm tall, with leaf blades roughly 10–18 cm long and 7–12 cm wide. Cultivated Silver Dragon plants can vary with age, pot size, growing conditions and nursery batch, but the species stays naturally compact. The raised surface shows clearly on a shelf, cabinet, plant stand or eye-level display.

Silver leaf colour and raised surface

The silver effect comes from the pale grey-green blade portions between the veins. On mature leaves, those panels sit against a darker vein network, creating a crisp, shield-like pattern. The surface is bullate, meaning the blade rises between the veins into a textured, cushioned relief. Even young plants can show a firm, sculptural leaf surface.

New leaves usually open softer, paler and less defined. As the blade hardens, the silver-grey colour becomes clearer and the darker venation gains sharper definition. A freshly opened leaf can look slightly muted for several days, then settle into the stronger contrast expected from Silver Dragon. Mature leaves feel thick and leathery, with a matte finish that gives the pale panels a cool, mineral look.

  • Leaf shape: rounded shield leaves attached peltately, giving the blade a centred look.
  • Leaf surface: raised, bullate and firm once mature.
  • Colour impression: silver-grey panels framed by darker green veins.
  • Growth habit: short rhizome, upright petioles and a compact habit.
  • Indoor form: compact silver foliage with visible texture and colour contrast.

Silver Dragon within baginda

Alocasia baginda is native to Borneo, with botanical records placing the species in eastern Kalimantan. It grows in a wet tropical biome and belongs to the Araceae family. The species has thick, stiff, peltate leaves and a short rhizome; indoors, the roots need warmth, steady moisture and an airy substrate.

Silver Dragon shows the paler side of the species group. Dark Dragon Scale forms read greener and heavier, while Silver Dragon gives the same compact structure a lighter, more mineral surface. The difference is most visible on mature leaves: Silver Dragon has brighter interveinal panels, while the darker forms carry deeper green relief. Both need similar care because the underlying species and root structure are the same.

Growth in small pots

Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' grows gradually indoors. A healthy plant may produce one new leaf, hold a small set of mature blades and retire an older leaf as the base changes. The plant builds thick leaf tissue and a firm rhizome, with later leaves often becoming firmer and more defined.

A pot close to the root mass gives the most even moisture pattern. Large pots can keep the lower mix wet while the top looks dry, which creates stress around the rhizome. Repot when roots have filled the container or the substrate has lost its open structure. Move up gradually and refresh the mix before it becomes dense, sour or slow to dry.

Maintaining silver raised foliage

  • Light: Give screened window light or soft filtered morning sun. Brightness keeps new leaves firmer and makes the silver panels easier to see; harsh direct sun can mark the blades.
  • Watering: Allow the top layer and upper mix to dry before the next full watering. Remove runoff after watering so the base remains airy.
  • Substrate: Use a structured aroid substrate with bark, coarse mineral particles and a moisture-holding base. The roots need moisture and oxygen after each watering.
  • Temperature: Keep conditions warm and even, roughly 20–28 °C during active growth. Cold windowsills, draughts and cold water can slow root activity quickly.
  • Humidity: A humid growing setup helps new leaves open cleanly and reduces dry edge stress. A humidifier, cabinet or grouped plant setup gives steady conditions.
  • Feeding: Feed sparingly during warm active growth. Gentle, diluted nutrition matches the compact root system and helps reduce salt accumulation.
  • Air movement: Gentle airflow around the plant helps the leaf surface dry normally and keeps the base from sitting in stagnant air.
  • Mineral substrates: Silver Dragon can adapt to inert mineral or semi-hydro substrates when transitioned carefully, kept warm and supplied with balanced nutrients.

Winter leaf quality

In darker months, Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' may slow leaf production or hold its existing base for longer. A single older leaf can fade while the rhizome remains firm and active. In this phase, the pot dries more slowly, so watering intervals usually stretch. Warmth at the root zone and consistent indirect light matter more than extra fertiliser.

Leaf colour can also look flatter in weak light or while a new leaf is still hardening. Give each new blade time to mature before assessing the final silver effect. If growth pauses, keep the plant warm, avoid cold wet substrate and wait for the next active period before repotting or dividing.

Surface marks from root stress

  • Dull or greener leaves: Check whether the leaf is still hardening, then review light level. Bright softened daylight usually gives clearer silver-grey panels.
  • Yellowing leaves: Check pot weight, substrate structure and root temperature. Several yellow leaves together often show root stress or a lower mix that stayed wet.
  • Brown tips or margins: Review watering consistency, humidity and mineral build-up. Pale panels can show marks from hard water or fertiliser salts.
  • Drooping petioles: Inspect moisture below the surface before watering. Thirst, cold exposure, heat load and root decline can all cause droop.
  • Twisted or marked new leaves: Check petiole bases, leaf backs and new growth for thrips or spider mites.
  • Soft rhizome tissue: Remove the plant from the pot and inspect the base. Firm tissue can often restart in a cleaner, airier mix.

Propagation and leaf turnover

Remove fully yellowed leaves at the base with clean scissors once the plant has withdrawn energy from them. Keep healthy leaves in place, because a compact habit needs functioning blades to feed the rhizome. Clean mature leaves gently with a soft damp cloth and avoid rubbing newly opened leaves before they have firmed.

Propagation is by division, offsets or firm corms while the plant is actively growing. Small pieces need a warm setup, restrained pot size and an open substrate. Mature plants can flower with an Alocasia-style spathe and spadix; indoors, the textured foliage and cool-toned leaf surface remain the focus.

Access near rigid textured leaves

Alocasia baginda 'Silver Dragon' contains irritating oxalate crystals. Keep it out of reach of pets and children, especially during leaf clean-up. Use gloves around sap, roots and cut rhizome tissue if your skin is sensitive.

Baginda behind Silver Dragon

Alocasia baginda Kurniawan & P.C.Boyce was published in 2011 in the Araceae family. The published species name uses baginda, an Indonesian honorific connected with noble status.

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Altairjones
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 3
I’m a little disappointed.
Format: Kindle
I usually like Jillian West’s books but this one was missing a lot for me. The pregnancy didn’t come across as real. She’s on her feet for 12 hour days but is perfectly healthy at 8 months pregnant? Yet the week she moves in all of a sudden she’s not? She is planning on actually running during one of the plot buildups. But at 8 months pregnant that’s incredibly hard to do. The lack of breathing ability and lung space, the change in body center, mass, and gravity. All of it prohibits running, unless you’re an athlete this didn’t come off as at all realistic. I didn’t feel any connection with the alphas. There wasn’t any emotional connection. It could be because of the tense it was written in. But I didn’t get any deep feelings out of this. It came across as checking off boxes. Even the spicy scenes weren’t really believable for me. I wanted to see them fall for her, and it just kind of all fizzled. Even Bishop. One thing I did really like was the ending. I did not see it coming and I’m interested in reading book two because of it. But on the whole this book was mostly disappointing for me.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2024
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Melissa Williams
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 4
4.25 stars
Format: Kindle
Vale is an 8 month pregnant omega working as a waitress at a strip club and a cam girl. She starts to get very creepy vibes from a regular at the club, and her baby daddy ghosted her. She has had an online relationship with a man named Bishop through her cam girl status. One night, bishop was paying to watch her sleep and ansthe creepy regular Andrew break in and watch her sleep he tells vale to come to him at his business now. She flees and finds herself at a large security company with some.hot of alphas who are there to help her. This imegaverse is a little different than I have read, but I am thoroughly enjoying it. Vale is not a traditional omega she was raised by a single beta mom, and the alphas are not normal alphas they have never really loved pack life. But they are ruthless mercenaries. They need her, and she needs them. I love the aspect of the stalker and now the plot twists at the end, so so good. Sometimes, it seemed a little slow and stale mated, but since this a duet, I think It was just her starting to have Vale get to know her alpha suitors. Cliffhanger for sure with this one.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2024
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Austin & Cambria
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
That ending 😫
Format: Kindle
I fell into a false sense of security and really thought this was gearing towards a happy ending. Then I realized there’s no work they don’t punish Andrew. I really liked Vale’s character. I don’t normally read books with pregnancy but going into this knowing she was pregnant made it more enjoyable for me. I loved Bishops devotion to her and her happiness. I also loved that Holt and Mercy couldn’t fight their attraction to her. I love scent matches so very much. I’m so curious to see how this duet will end up. And I need to pay more attention and notice that a book I’m starting is a duet to begin with lol
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Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
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Sarah A
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
oh wow
Format: Kindle
I just knew there was something about Cooper! I’m wondering if he’s about to be included but damn I’m glad he’s at least not a rapist and creepy guy, he just got called on assignment and had to go! This should be interesting! She’s gonna run and then what’s his face is gonna grab her. I’m worried! Wow that was a great book and cliffhanger! Loving this!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2025
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Ashley Morgan
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
ABSOLUTELY A MUST for Omegaverse Girls!!!
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE Jillian West and her books!!! I’m so happy I already bought book two and now I have to buy the others for the Assurance Security series!! Not gonna lie Val kind of annoyed me at the beginning but she grew on me!! Her men are chef’s kisses!!! Holt annoys me some but I can let it slide. I already bought part two so I’m going to be reading that in between work phone calls!!!! DON’T TELL MY BOSS 😂😂😂😂
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Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2025

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