Digitalis purpurea 'Hanabee Rose' is a showy foxglove that quickly adds vertical color with densely packed, rose-pink, tubular bells marked with speckled throats. You can use it to lift the back of a border, tuck it along a fence, or weave it through cottage-style plantings where its tall flower spikes read as instant structure.
Plant it in full sun to part shade; in many gardens, a little afternoon shade helps keep foliage fresher through warm weather. Give it moist, well-drained soil with plenty of organic matter, and water during dry spells to keep flowering strong. Space plants so air can move through the leaves to reduce leaf-spot and other fungal issues.
After bloom, deadhead spent spikes to tidy the plant and limit unwanted self-seeding, or leave a few stalks to mature if you want it to reappear in future seasons. This is often grown as a biennial or short-lived perennial, so allowing some seed to set can help maintain a long-lasting display without replanting every year.
All parts of foxglove are poisonous if eaten, so site it where children and pets are unlikely to nibble. As a bonus in many landscapes, it is commonly avoided by deer and rabbits and the flowers can be attractive to hummingbirds and other pollinators.