Elegant succulent not present in nature, but obtained in the nursery as a cross even between different genera, Sedum and Echeveria. The exemplar is arranged in compact rosettes, which tend to grow often like a tower with their small ovoid and pointed leaves. Over time, the rosettes can ignite giving rise to unusual and wonderful succulent bouquets that look like real flowers. The foliage has a flat upper surface and a strongly fleshy and roundish lower surface, ending in a bulging tip that turns upwards. One of the strengths of Sedeveria is the coloring: its epidermis is tinged with showy bluish notes, made even colder and opaque by a sort of whitish plum that covers the entire surface and protects it from atmospheric agents, giving it at the same time a truly exemplary charm and refinement, almost like a kind of ice plant!