Morning glories are old fashioned favorites. Climbing vines with a profusion of trumpet shaped flowers with widely flaring faces. Colros are mainly blues and reds, but there are others, whites, pinks, and striped/banded patterns as well as those with dark or lighter centers. Here are discussed the really rare ones, those with double flowers. These are not at all common, even in the literature, and have pink or red double blooms. They are as easy to grow as the others and provide that vertical accent of color and function very well in narrow spaces and containers. Full sun is best, with ample watering and fertilizing to keep growth vigorous and blooms coming on in profusion. Split Second is the dbl pink and Sinrise Serenade is the dbl red. These bloom even younger/faster than the others. I have plants only a few inches tall that have bloomed! Of course, they need some kind of support to grow on and for their twining stems. You can plant them on a fence and they will spread out laterally when the vines reach the top of the fence. perfect for columns, stakes, even tall sturdy plants like shrubs, hollyhocks, sunflowers, corn or mix with pole beans on the post to give additional color besides veggie harvests. Season of bloom is a long one, from mid spring to frost. Save the seeds as sometimes that is the only way to be sure you have them to sow next year. They are not always regularly carried by seed catalogs, if at all. They can give added color to many shrubs. Spring flowerers are now made more colorful with these growing on top of them. Roses are another classic example and you can use these instead of clematis(which can be difficult sometimes). Summer flowering things like abutilons can now have color accents besides their own floral color. You can have deep blues or scarlet reds, or pinks, etc. to the color of those shrubs for a more brilliant floral display.