In Viola odorata, chasmogamous (CH) or open flowers and small, short‐petioled leaves are produced under 11 hr or less of daylight, cleistogamous (CL) or closed flowers and large, long‐petioled leaves under 14 hr or more of daylight, and intermediate floral and leaf forms under transitional photoperiods. CL flowers are approximately four times smaller than CH flowers and differ morphologically in repressed growth of the anterior petal spur and staminal nectaries, and recurving of the style which remains enclosed within the cone formed by anther appendages. Both CH and CL shoot systems conform to a (2 + 3) phyllotaxis with minor differences in leaf divergence angles and phyllotactic indices. The larger CL leaf grows significantly faster than the CH leaf, and an increased rate of leaf initiation occurs in the CL apex represented by a plastochron of 3.4 days compared to 4.3 days in the CH apex. The plastochron index was used to indirectly age young floral primordia nondestructively until prophase of meiosis I within the anthers. This event occurs 8 days earlier in the CL than the CH flower. Time from meiosis until flower maturity, determined by direct observation, is about 14 days for the CL flower, versus 21 days for the CH flower.