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Manufacturing Chrysanthemums

Written for GrowerTalks
SEP 2025 column
01
SEP 2025

Awesome color. Awesome price. It sounds like the mum slogan because these are the unique superpowers chrysanthemums bring to the market. No other major crop delivers such big color at such a low price. Dependable, reliable, repeatable, and interchangeable are other important marketing words for the category, the same words Stanley uses to describe the tools they manufacture. I could argue that mums are manufactured fashion products, too, like designer clothes.


The tolerance in this combo is pretty tight. The consistent bloom height, along with consistent flower size, builds the dome. No other crop parks its bloom so precisely in place.

CHR Combo 1

Industry Focus on Durability

Mum’s manufactured flavor comes from two places. First is the supply chain’s emphasis on durability. The *wiggle test* and the *drop test* bake strength directly into the cuttings. Wiggling or shaking a pot during trial exposes possible breaks in the branching that would lead to splitting later.

Dropping a mature pot like a customer with butterfingers brings to light any possible cracks in the dome. Strong branches and sturdy plants resist impact better. If no breaks appear, that candidate moves forward in breeding.

These tests are done up and down the supply chain, from field trials to distributors to the growing farms themselves. This industry-wide attention to durability creates the sheer weight of inspection, squeezing any weaker stuff out of the market. As a result, mums are much stronger now than they were 10 or 20 years ago.


Notice the orange mum matches the calla lily, and the white mum catches the veins of the ornamental cabbage. Mums use their wide range of colors to stay fresh and current in the decor scene. Affordable components let the younger generation make their own pieces.

CHR Planting 1

The Rise of the Families

Another influence leading to the manufactured vibe comes from tight-fisted mum families designed around very specific traits, down to the week of the bloom. Modern mum series come from closely controlled sports of highly programmable breeding candidates. This strategy produces cultivars so tightly matched they are nearly identical in all traits but color.

Predictable bloom times, dependable production, repeatable performance, interchangeable colors, and precise tolerances are deeply woven into the selection process that determines the single winner from thousands of other perfectly good mums. This *best of a thousand* strategy pairs up nicely with the high volume/low price formula of the mum market. Manufacture well to profit well—just like the tool guys.

The photos show the precise tolerance mums can deliver. It takes just a sliver of difference for a white blossom to pop up slightly from the yellow ones around it. That means the two cultivars came within millimeters of each other, in a product designed to fit comfortably in a half bushel basket. What other crop gets tolerances this close?


The signature look of Flamingo Pineapple Pink is it’s three-toned look: pale pink tips, pale yellow flower and golden center. Growing on the cooler side brings out more pink.

Flamingo Pineapple Garden MumPatent Information: PP23,484Color Code: 230c-115cBall Seed 2013, BSCBloom detailPhoto:  Ed Higgins 2012?FlamingoPineapple_DSC_3533.JPGMUM13-16496.JPG

Current Color Trends

Families enable mums to do their tricolor trick, blending colors from three different cuttings into an array of design styles from pie slices to starry mixtures. Tricolor combos give more value to the mum product, allowing growers to ship a premium mum with a better margin.

Another chrysanthemum party trick is the sophisticated pigmentation of the blooms. Breeders can tease out wide variations of a single shade but, more importantly, they can mix complementary or contrasting colors within the same bloom to create the illusion of a blend within a single solid planting.

A good example of this effect is Flamingo Pineapple Pink, a late season mum in sophisticated yellow with soft pink tips. Pigments saturate differently with the temperature. Higher degrees produce creamier blooms whereas slightly lower ones expose more pink.

Part of the recent popularity surge in dark plants, Metrona Bicolor Bronze has a yellow eye darkening to heavily petaled bronzy reds. The contrast is high, but not sharp; visually, it glows from the center.


The reverse contrast of Metrona Bicolor Bronze is unusual. The light yellow center glows from within like a smoky fire. A new introduction, this cultivar has shown up on the sales charts.

Metrona Bronze Garden MumColor Code: 7427c-7408cBSC 2025, #19-092009Bloom, Vegetative10.23 West Chicago, Mark WidhalmJob: 2465260619-092009_01.JPGMUM23-31563.JPG

Cosmic builds an entire family around the ombre effect, with a very dark eye and lighter tips. This series has a European-style habit, targeting W40 for its retail display. **Meteor Bronze** and Lunar Pink have the greatest contrast between the eye and the edges. Solar Yellow has a small dark eye, creating more of a pinhole or polka dot patttern over the dome.

Ball Mums publishes the ratio of their color sales on a national scale, and the ratio is instructive. Yellow sells the best at 27%, followed by Orange at 23% and Red at 19%, then everything else. Broadly stated, you want about 3x as many yellows in production as whites, going a little heavier on pinks. Purples are in between. There’s some wobble from year to year, but very little.


Cosmic builds an entire series around the dark eye theme. 

Enchantia White CupheaColor Code: WhiteBFP 2025, #222083Gallon Pot On Sweep, Vegetative05.23 Arroyo Grande, Mark WidhalmJob: 23504228CUPH-222083_02.JPGCUP23-31077_AL_CC.jpgReplacement Enchantia Lavender CupheaColor Code: 2572cBFP 2025, #222090Gallon Pot On Sweep, Vegetative05.23 Arroyo Grande, Mark WidhalmJob: 23504228CUPH-222090_02.JPGCUP23-31081_CC.jpg Enchantia Purple CupheaColor Code: 252c, 2583cBFP 2025, #222084Gallon Pot On Sweep, Vegetative05.23 Arroyo Grande, Mark WidhalmJob: 23504228CUPH-222084_02.JPGCUP23-31079_CC.jpg
Cosmic Lunar Pink Cosmic Meteor Brown Cosmic Solar Yellow

Mums and Their Competitors

A mum backlash does exist, a trend I call mums & more. Most places can’t walk away from chrysanthemum sales, but they can stress other fall material like Autumn Fire, Black Pearl, Caramel, Cheyenne Spirit, Fireworks, Glamour Red, and Vertigo. For progressive growers who lean hard into the message, chrysanthemum’s share of autumn revenues can dip below 50%. It’s possible to build a business off more than mums.

But most choose to stay with the mum. It still churns fall color into money at the bank. It’s still the big dog crop of autumn. Mum’s sense of same-y works to its advantage here. In autumn, mums are the horticultural equivalent of mac-and-cheese, comfort food for the soul that grounds the porch to the neighborhood with a sense of belonging. Yes, it’s hand-wavy creative speak, but ask someone who puts a mum on the stoop (younger) or in the garden (older) and they’re likely to tell you the same thing. Predictable. Dependable. Reliable. It’s more than just awesome color at an awesome price.


The delicate nature of the Chrysanthemum color shift falls right in line with other sophisticated color trends in the ornamental world. Look at the color palette of the modern pansy mix to see the same trends.

CHR Combo 2

 

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