Shipping Estimate
USA
- USA
- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 10 - Jul 15
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
philodendron red secret Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata – Foliage FactoryAlocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata layers cream, pale pink and green patterning over the thick metallic leaves of Alocasia cuprea. The plant keeps the dense cuprea leaf build of Red Secret, with glossy peltate blades, raised venation and deep purple leaf backs. Each leaf can show a different balance of metallic colour and pale tissue, giving the base a detailed, changing appearance as new blades mature.
Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata
Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata layers cream, pale pink and green patterning over the thick metallic leaves of Alocasia cuprea. The plant keeps the dense cuprea leaf build of Red Secret, with glossy peltate blades, raised venation and deep purple leaf backs. Each leaf can show a different balance of metallic colour and pale tissue, giving the base a detailed, changing appearance as new blades mature.
Alocasia cuprea is a Bornean Alocasia with leathery, bullate leaves and a compact erect rhizome. North Kalimantan material records plants around 49.5 cm tall, with petioles to around 46 cm and glossy silver-green blades that are darker near the main veins and deep purple underneath. In this variegated form, the pale pattern adds extra colour while the cuprea leaf structure supplies the weight, shine and sculpted surface.
Variegation across metallic leaves
Pale tissue is most detailed where it crosses the raised panels of the blade. Cream, pale pink and soft green areas can appear as marbling, scattered patches, streaks or broader sectors. Because the surface is bullate and glossy, the pattern changes with leaf angle. A pale area can look warm cream from one side and soft pink from another, while darker metallic portions frame the pattern.
New leaves need time to settle. Fresh blades can open softer and lighter, with the variegation looking blurred before the tissue firms. As the leaf hardens, the surface becomes glossier, the purple underside deepens and the pattern becomes easier to read. Green areas remain important because they support the base and help the plant produce future leaves.
- Leaf pattern: cream, pale pink and green markings across metallic cuprea leaves.
- Leaf surface: thick, glossy and bullate, with raised panels between the main veins.
- Leaf underside: deep purple to burgundy, visible when leaves angle outward.
- Growth habit: compact rhizome with substantial leaves held close above the pot.
- Pattern range: natural variation between greener, paler and mixed leaves.
Bornean cuprea context
Alocasia cuprea is recorded from Borneo, including Sabah, Sarawak and North Kalimantan. It grows as a terrestrial plant in wet tropical forest settings, with documented North Kalimantan plants found from riverbank to cliff in montane forest, in sandy to humus-rich soil and open to moderate shade. Indoors, give filtered brightness, warmth, regular moisture and an airy substrate.
Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata usually grows more slowly than greener cuprea plants because pale tissue contributes less energy than green tissue. The base stays steadier when leaves carry both colour and enough green surface. A greener leaf after transport, repotting or winter slowing can help rebuild the plant; a paler leaf carries more pale tissue and needs gentle conditions while the blade hardens.
Managing variegated Red Secret leaves
- Light: Give screened window light or soft filtered morning sun. Brightness keeps new leaves firm and pattern visibility, while hot direct sun can mark pale tissue.
- Watering: Rewater when the surface is dry and the pot feels lighter; the lower mix should regain air between soaks.
- Substrate: Use a breathable aroid mix with bark, coarse mineral drainage and a moisture-holding base. Keep the rhizome evenly supplied with moisture while the mix remains open to air.
- Temperature: Keep conditions warm, ideally around 20–28 °C. Cold wet substrate can slow roots and weaken petioles quickly.
- Humidity: A humid cabinet or room humidifier helps metallic variegated leaves finish cleanly and reduces crisping on cream or pink sections.
- Feeding: Apply diluted feed during warm growth, then pause as the plant slows. Light, regular nutrition is safer for pale tissue than strong fertiliser doses.
- Handling: Move the plant by the pot and let new leaves harden before cleaning. Fresh pale tissue bruises easily.
- Mineral substrates: This form can adapt to inert mineral or semi-hydro substrates after a careful transition, with steady warmth and balanced nutrients.
Leaf finish and base strength
The metallic finish and pale tissue both show stress quickly. Water marks, mineral residue, direct sun, rubbing and low humidity can leave visible marks on the glossy surface. Mature leaves can be wiped with a soft damp cloth while the blade is supported from below. Fresh leaves should finish expanding before heavy cleaning or repositioning.
Pot size affects root stability. A container close to the root mass gives a more even drying pattern and helps the base avoid wet pockets around the rhizome. A small step up while the plant is actively growing is usually enough. Keep dead sheaths and spent leaves from sitting damp at the base, especially in cabinets or humid displays.
Issues on variegated cuprea leaves
- Brown marks on cream or pink areas: Check heat load, humidity, leaf contact, hard-water residue and fertiliser salts. Pale variegated tissue marks stress early.
- Yellowing after watering: Inspect the lower mix and root condition. A heavy pot after several days can signal reduced oxygen around the rhizome.
- Dull metallic surface: Look for dust, mineral spotting, sun stress or mite damage before changing the whole setup.
- Stuck new leaf: Raise humidity around the plant, keep warmth steady and allow the soft blade to open on its own.
- Soft base or sour pot smell: Check roots and substrate immediately. Firm rhizome tissue can restart in a cleaner, airier mix.
- Pest marks: Leaf-surface pests can mark glossy leaves with fine speckling, scarring or webbing along the undersides.
Growth cycle, propagation and flowering
Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata can pause through the low-light season or after transport while roots adjust. During this slower period, keep the plant warm, extend watering intervals according to pot drying and keep feeding light. The next leaf may be greener, paler or more mixed; assess the base over several leaves before changing the setup.
Propagation is by division, offsets or firm corms as the plant produces new leaves. Young divisions need warmth, modest pot volume and an open substrate. Mature Alocasia cuprea can produce paired inflorescences with a spathe and spadix; indoors, the variegated metallic leaves remain the focus.
Handling metallic variegated leaves
Alocasia cuprea 'Red Secret' Variegata contains irritating calcium oxalate crystals. Keep the variegated leaves beyond reach of pets and young children. Use gloves during pruning or division if your skin reacts to sap.
Variegated pattern on Red Secret
Alocasia cuprea (K.Koch & C.D.Bouché) K.Koch, published under Alocasia in 1861 in the Araceae family. The epithet cuprea comes from Latin cupreus, meaning coppery or of copper.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
- Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy