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dracaena png Pele Dracaena – Plant Detectives

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Description

dracaena png Pele Dracaena – Plant DetectivesPele Dracaena (Dracaena fragrans 'Pele') Pele Dracaena is an upright tropical houseplant valued for its glossy striped foliage, cane like growth, and easy indoor performance. Its broad green leaves are accented with bright lime to golden green striping, giving the plant a clean, colorful look without needing flowers for impact. The vertical habit makes it useful in homes, offices, lobbies, and interior plant displays where height is needed without a

Pele Dracaena (Dracaena fragrans 'Pele')

Pele Dracaena is an upright tropical houseplant valued for its glossy striped foliage, cane-like growth, and easy indoor performance. Its broad green leaves are accented with bright lime to golden green striping, giving the plant a clean, colorful look without needing flowers for impact. The vertical habit makes it useful in homes, offices, lobbies, and interior plant displays where height is needed without a wide footprint. With bright indirect light, well-drained soil, and careful watering, Pele Dracaena brings dependable structure and tropical foliage color to indoor spaces.

Distinctive Features

Pele Dracaena grows from upright shoots or canes topped with rosettes of broad, glossy leaves. The foliage is the main ornamental feature, with rich green leaves and bright lime to golden green variegation that adds contrast through the year. Its slow growth and upright habit make it easier to manage indoors than many broad, spreading tropical plants. While mature Dracaena fragrans can flower under ideal conditions, Pele Dracaena is grown primarily for its foliage and rarely blooms as an indoor houseplant.

Growing Conditions

  • Sun: Grows best in bright indirect light but can tolerate medium to low indoor light, while harsh direct sun may scorch the foliage.
  • Soil: Prefers a well-drained indoor potting mix that holds light moisture without staying soggy.
  • Water: Allow the soil to dry partly between waterings, then water thoroughly and let excess drain away.
  • USDA Zones: Best grown as a houseplant in most climates and hardy outdoors only in frost-free tropical conditions, generally USDA Zones 10 to 12.
  • Mature Size: Typically reaches about 4 to 8 feet tall and 2 to 3 feet wide indoors, depending on pot size, light, and pruning.
  • Habit: Forms an upright, slow-growing tropical houseplant with cane-like stems and rosettes of broad arching foliage.

Ideal Uses

  • Focal Point: Use as a vertical indoor focal point in living rooms, offices, entry areas, lobbies, or bright corners where its striped foliage can add height and structure.
  • Floor Plant: Place in a decorative container where its upright form can fill space without spreading too widely.
  • Office Plant: Use in workspaces where a durable foliage plant can handle typical indoor light and low-maintenance care routines.
  • Interior Accent: Pair with lower houseplants to create a layered indoor plant display with contrasting leaf shapes, heights, and textures.
  • Container Planting: Grow in a sturdy, well-drained pot with enough weight and room to support the plant as it gains height.

Low Maintenance Care

  • Watering: Water when the upper soil has dried and avoid letting the plant sit in standing water, since overwatering can lead to root problems.
  • Light Care: Rotate the pot occasionally so the plant grows evenly toward the light and keeps a balanced shape.
  • Leaf Care: Wipe leaves occasionally with a damp cloth to remove dust and keep the glossy foliage looking clean.
  • Humidity: Average indoor humidity is usually acceptable, though the plant benefits from slightly higher humidity in very dry rooms.
  • Fertilizing: Feed lightly during the active growing season with a balanced houseplant fertilizer, following label directions.
  • Pruning: Remove yellow or damaged leaves as needed and cut back canes if height control or branching is desired.

Why Choose Pele Dracaena?

  • Striped Foliage: Displays glossy green leaves with bright lime to golden green variegation for year-round indoor color.
  • Upright Shape: Adds vertical structure without taking up as much width as many other large houseplants.
  • Easy Indoor Care: Handles typical home and office conditions when watered carefully and kept out of harsh direct sun.
  • Slow Growth: Maintains a manageable size indoors and can be pruned if additional height control is needed.
  • Versatile Placement: Works well in living rooms, offices, entries, lobbies, bright corners, and decorative containers.

Pele Dracaena is an excellent choice for anyone who wants a colorful, upright houseplant with tropical character and manageable care needs. Its glossy striped foliage, cane-like structure, and narrow footprint make it a dependable plant for adding height, texture, and year-round greenery to interior spaces.

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SKU: 88660079303

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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2026
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Tammy Marshall
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★★★★★ 3
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Color: Lifting (Jericho Rose)
I would give it a 5 based on the appearance after the mask is removed your skin is glassy but the moisture level is lacking. It leaves behind an oily residue and my face didn’t feel hydrated. The search continues.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2026
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John P. Jones III
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
“The fragments of a life”…
A formidable movie, in the stricter sense of the word. In a looser sense, it has helped shape the way that I’ve seen the world, ‘lo these past six decades. I saw this movie when it first came out, in 1963, at one of my favorite art theaters in Pittsburgh. Like most of us at the time, we’d only viewed rather straightforward movies of “good and evil,” Westerners, and the like. Predictable endings. The director of “8 ½,” Federico Fellini, offered something radically different, a foreshadowing of the stream-of-consciousness technique in literature, how the fragments of one’s life get all jumbled up in the brain. And he provided some takeaways that have long been with me. I was 16 at the time and took a date who was 15. In re-watching it now, if I thought it somewhat baffling at 16, I wonder what my date thought about the portrayal of the women in the movie, who are “fragments” in the life of the movie director, Guido Anselmi, excellently played by Marcello Mastroianni. There is his wife, Luisa, wonderfully played by Anouk Aimée, who was the motive force behind the re-watching of it now. There is the “virginal” Claudia Cardinale, usually in white (I had not realized that she was originally Tunisian). Sandra Milo plays Guido’s flighty bimbo of a mistress. And so many others: The airline stewardess; the caring mom who wraps the infant Guido in a blanket; the first stripper; the insightful and nagging friend of his wife… “Upstairs when you are 40.” That was one of the big takeaways. Anselmi is having this male fantasy about his “harem,” all those fragmented women who are there to serve him and do so in complete harmony when he realizes that the “stripper” is now 40 and must go upstairs, the metaphor for being placed on the “discard pile” for being too old. He gets out his bull whip even, to drive her up the stairs. Even at 16, when 40 is more than twice your life away, it did seem a bit harsh, particularly when the same rule does not apply to the guy with the bull whip. It was also my first viewing of the prototype of those pompous pedantic critics of movies or literature who toss around expressions like “impoverished poetic imagination,” “overabundant symbols,” and, of course, “self-indulgent.” I was in parochial high school at the time, so the scenes in which the priests were chasing down the young student Guido in order to shame and humiliate him because he found sexual imagery to be of interest, imagine that, strongly resonated. It was also the era that the Catholic Church published “The Index of Forbidden Books,” (which now seems to have been taken over by the woke crowd of today), and thus the scene in which Anselmi has to pay homage to the Cardinal also resonated. Anouk Aimée is absolutely mesmerizing. She has been a “fragment” of my own life, ever since I viewed “A Man and a Woman” in the ’60’s. Again, she played opposite the equally formidable Jean-Louis Trintignant, of “Z,” “Three Colors, Red,” and so much else, fame. Far more relevantly, the two of them recently played in “The Best Years of Our Lives,” again directed by Claude Lelouch. Aimée is now a young 90. In her role as Anselmi’s wife, Luisa, she wore those glasses that connotated a greater thoughtfulness than him. I searched that ever-so-youthful face watching for the subtle expressions of later movies. It struck to the core. Luisa is utterly fed up with Guido’s philandering and constant lies. And Guido is suffering from “director’s block” in trying to finish his movie, with what sort of message? Luisa fires off THE classic line that I have long remembered: “But what can you say to strangers when you can’t tell the truth to the one closest to you…”. The only problem is that I’ve felt that line was said in Ingmar Bergman’s “Scenes from a Marriage.” And maybe that line was ALSO said in Bergman’s movie, which means one more movie I need to watch to find out. As I said earlier, things can tend to get jumbled up in the brain, even more so as one ages. Fellini would understand, maybe Aimée would also. 5-stars, plus for Fellini’s classic, formidable film.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2023
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Stephen McLeod
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
One of the greatest in SPECTACULAR DVD package
This new Criterion Collection edition of *8 1/2* is one of the best DVD "special edition" sets I've come across. The Movie: Fellini's breakthrough film is a movie about itself. It is archetypal in the Fellini canon because it both settles old scores and announces a new cinema. The film's hero is an Italian filmaker (Mastroianni as "Guido" a quasi-alter ego for the director) who has just had his first major hit (=La Dolce Vita). He is not resting on his laurels, however. He is confronted with the necessity of the next movie. This necessity is both personal to the director and apparently contractual: the producer is forever hovering... To Guido, it is an inner necessity, an unrest, a creative suffocation, objectified in the opening sequence of the movie where Guido is seen/not seen by the camera, trapped inside a tiny car that is itself trapped in a traffic jam that stretches endlessly beyond available light as the car fills with toxic gas. We see the as yet unidentified hero in silhouette from behind. We see his hands and feet from outside the car, through the window as he desparately tries to escape. Then, he mysteriously escapes through the car's roof like a new bird escaping its shell and is carried off into the clouds, etc. The trouble is, this is a wish fulfillment dream. In "real" life, Guido is about to make a movie, and he has no idea what it's going to be about, or what to do with all the actors and extras, and the giant launching pad for some kind of space-ship that is the only thing even close to a concrete idea for the projected picture. The film is not, however, a perfect autobiographical fit. For one thing, Fellini gets to finish his movie and Guido, evidently, does not. But, that said, the movie is a virtual mirror of itself, which was a very hard thing to pull off in 1962, before the concept of "virtual" was annexed by the codifiers of computer jargon, and *8 1/2* is nothing if not a virtuoso performance. Fellini's breakthrough is the film we watch. But in the film, the hero finds the resolution to his anguish, not in finding the project - that is, in making what would have been the film-about-itself within the film-about-itself within the film-about-itself that we are, finally, watching - but in letting go of the project, in surrendering to the impossibility of finding it or making it. Precisely *on the other side of his own fantasy-suicide*, at the moment when he apparently gives in to despair, he discovers the circle of life and becomes able to join into the procession of lives into which his own life is finally intertwined. So, this is an essential film. And it is a film so rich in texture that a person could watch the movie a hundred times and find new things to wonder at, and discover new connections between the One and the Many - Fellini's personal/existential problem. The DVD: First disc contains a sparkling transfer of the movie that restores a luster to the angular lights and shadows in Fellini's final black & white movie. Audio commentary by a couple of scholars and Fellini's former close accomplice Gideon Bachman. Second disc contains Fellini's famous "Director's Notebook" of 1968(-9), an hour-long movie that was originally made for television, as well as another documentary about composer Nino Rota, and various interviews, including one with the ever-fiesty Lina Wertmueller who was Fellini's Asst. Director on *8 1/2*. The package also comes with a really interesting little booklet with lots of information and a thoughtful mini-essay. Overall a great package that I'll not regret buying.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2002

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