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Silver Lace Fern

SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pteris ensiformis 'Evergemiensis'

KNOWN AS: Silver Lace Fern, Slender Brake Fern, Sword Brake Fern

CLIMATE (LOCATION): Southeast Asia & Pacific Islands | Tropical Rainforest

DESCRIPTION: The Silver Lace Fern is a delicate and graceful variety known for its striking variegated foliage. It produces two types of fronds: broad, sterile fronds that mound at the base, and taller, slender fertile fronds that stand upright. Each leaflet features a bright, shimmering silver-white center framed by a thin, dark green border. Its fine texture and compact size make it a favorite for terrariums and indoor dish gardens.

moderate difficulty & pet safe

Silver Lace Fern Plant Care

Lighting

Light Requirement: Medium Light (Medium Indirect Light) to High Light (Bright Indirect Light)

The Silver Lace Fern prefers bright, filtered light to maintain its vivid white variegation.

The Sweet Spot: An east-facing window or a spot a few feet back from a south/west window is perfect.

Direct Sun: Avoid entirely. The paper-thin fronds will scorch and turn brown in minutes under direct afternoon sun.

Low Light: It can survive in lower light, but the growth will slow down significantly, and the silver centers may dull.

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Watering

Quick Tip: Do not let the soil dry out. Keep it consistently moist.

Like most ferns, the Silver Lace Fern has zero drought tolerance.

The Routine: Water as soon as the surface of the soil feels barely dry. The soil should feel like a damp sponge at all times.

The Warning: If this plant dries out even once, the fronds will quickly shrivel and become "crunchy." Unlike some plants, fern fronds rarely "bounce back" once they are crispy; you will have to prune them away.

Temperature

Preferred Temperature: 60º - 75º

This fern enjoys standard household temperatures but prefers the cooler side of tropical.

The Danger: Temperatures above 80°F can stress the plant unless the humidity is exceptionally high.

Cold: Keep it away from icy windows and drafty doors in the winter. It does not handle frost or temperatures below 55°F well.

Humidity

Preferred Humidity: 60 - 80%; High Humidity

High humidity is the "secret sauce" for keeping a Silver Lace Fern lush.

Indoor Air: Standard home humidity (especially in winter) is often too dry, leading to brown leaf tips.

The Solution: A humidifier is ideal. Alternatively, place the pot on a pebble tray filled with water or keep it in a bathroom with a window. It is an elite candidate for a terrarium where humidity remains trapped.

Additional Plant Care

Propagation
The Silver Lace Fern can be propagated through division or spores. How to Propagate: Division. During spring repotting, gently pull the root ball apart into smaller clumps, ensuring each section has healthy fronds and a solid root mass. Spores: You may see dark lines or dots on the underside of the tall fertile fronds; these are spores. Growing ferns from spores is a slow, advanced project but very rewarding.
Toxicity
Quick Warning: Non-Toxic to cats, dogs, and humans. This is a safe and beautiful option for pet-friendly homes.
Repotting
When to Repot: Every 1–2 years in the spring. Choose a Pot: A pot with excellent drainage is a must. Plastic or glazed ceramic pots are better than terracotta because they help keep the soil from drying out too fast. Soil: It needs a mix that holds water but stays "fluffy."
Pruning
Grooming: Ferns naturally shed older fronds. Use sterilized shears to cut dead, brown, or yellowing fronds off at the soil line to keep the plant looking tidy and encourage new growth. Cleaning: Do not use leaf shine. If the plant gets dusty, a gentle lukewarm shower in the sink is the best way to clean the delicate foliage.
Fertilizer
Quick Tip: Feed very lightly; ferns are sensitive to salt buildup. What to Use: A liquid houseplant fertilizer diluted to 1/4 strength. When to Apply: Once a month during the spring and summer. Pro-Tip: Always water the plant with plain water before applying fertilizer to protect the delicate, hair-like roots from chemical burns. Winter: Do not fertilize during the winter months.
Soil
Ideal Mix: A rich, moisture-retentive potting mix. Recommended Blend: 2 parts peat moss or coco coir, 1 part perlite, and 1 part choarse sand. Adding a little bit of leaf mold or compost can also help mimic its natural forest-floor environment.

Hanging Heights

Silver Lace Fern Lighting Requirements: Medium Light (Medium Indirect Light) to High Light (Bright Indirect Light)

Residential lighting design typically stays within a narrow 2700K to 3000K warm white range, and a plant's grow light is one of the few fixtures in a home still commonly sold outside it. The fix is to treat plant light as a fourth layer in the room's existing ambient, task, and accent scheme, matching that same warm color temperature and mounting it like any other fixture instead of adding it as separate equipment. This guide covers why most grow lights break that pattern, how layered lighting applies to plants, and how to place a fixture so it reads as part of the room instead of an add-on.

The real reason a plant struggles in a well-designed home usually isn't neglect, it's that the light your eyes register as bright is often a fraction of what that plant actually needs to grow. This guide covers why your eyes make a poor light meter, how quickly light fades as it moves into a room, what different spots in your home actually provide, and how to close the gap between how a room looks and what a plant needs to thrive.

ight temperature, measured in Kelvin (K), shapes the mood of a room because warm light (roughly 2700K to 3000K) reads as rest and comfort, while cool light (4000K and above) reads as alertness and focus. This guide explains how Kelvin works, what each range feels like, which color temperature suits each room, and why the quality of the light (not just its color) changes how a space feels.