Barmacreme – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose – Barth
With its softly shaded apricot-cream blooms and strong, classic fragrance, Barmacreme brings elegance and reliable hybrid-tea structure to family gardens, even where you must manage heavier soils with improved drainage or raised beds to avoid waterlogging. An upright, mid-sized bush that stays neat and tidy, it is easy to place in small front gardens, narrow borders or cottage-style mixes without overwhelming surrounding plants. Medium-care needs mean it fits a “plant it and it works” routine, suiting gardeners who prefer simple, seasonal jobs over constant attention, while its repeat-flowering performance keeps colour coming through summer. Own-root planting supports long-term longevity and reliable regrowth after pruning, giving confidence for low-fuss, perennial structure in the same spot. The large, exhibition-style flowers are ideal for scented cutting, adding indoor romance without sacrificing garden display. Well-rooted in the 2-litre pot, it settles quickly and responds well to straightforward feeding and watering, building roots in year one, bushy growth in year two and full ornamental impact by year three. Whether you use a single specimen or a short row, it offers balanced harmony with lavender, bluebeard and other classic companions in a calm, coordinated planting scheme.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose near the front door |
The upright, compact habit forms a neat vertical accent that stays within typical front-garden proportions, while large, very double flowers and a strong classic scent give a welcoming, elegant feel close to the entrance for beginners |
| Small mixed border in a family garden |
Dense mid-green foliage and balanced 80–110 cm height let it weave comfortably among perennials without dominating, its pastel cream and peach-pink tones blending easily into existing planting schemes for style-conscious owners |
| Classic cottage-style planting with perennials |
The romantic, cupped blooms and soft colour transitions pair naturally with lavender, bluebeard and salvias, creating a relaxed cottage look that still reads ordered rather than wild for cottage-garden lovers |
| Repeat-flowering cutting-and-display bed |
Solitary, XL blooms on sturdy stems provide regular material for vases, while the strong yet not overpowering fragrance gives traditional rose character indoors across the season for home decorators |
| Easy-care rose group of 3–5 plants |
Medium maintenance needs suit simple seasonal routines; planted at the recommended spacing, several bushes knit into a coherent, long-lived block of colour and foliage without complex pruning regimes for busy gardeners |
| Long-term structural planting in a small garden |
As an own-root rose it rebuilds reliably from its base, supporting a multi-year framework that copes well with routine pruning, giving stable structure and ornamental value over time for long-term planners |
| Raised bed or improved heavy-clay border |
The bushy, upright plant makes good use of modest raised spaces, and performs reliably when planted into well-prepared, free-draining soil in areas where heavier garden ground needs better drainage for practical homeowners |
| Large container on patio or roof terrace |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, its compact footprint and generous blooms create a refined focal point, with manageable care needs and consistent flowering suiting paved spaces and smaller urban gardens for urban residents |
Styling ideas
- Doorstep – Place a single Barmacreme by the front step with clipped box or dwarf yew for a simple, scented welcome – ideal for homeowners wanting smart kerb appeal.
- Cottage – Combine with lavender, bluebeard and catmint in a loose drift so its pastel blooms float above a haze of blues and mauves – perfect for cottage-style enthusiasts.
- Pastel – Build a soft-hued border with cream daylilies, pale foxgloves and silver foliage so Barmacreme’s peach-pink tones tie the scheme together – suited to lovers of gentle colour.
- Formal – Plant a short, evenly spaced row along a path, underplanted with low lavender or thyme, to echo traditional hybrid-tea formality – attractive to fans of classic layouts.
- Patio – Grow one plant in a 50-litre terracotta pot with trailing lobelia or bacopa at the rim to bring fragrance and structure to small terraces – great for balcony and courtyard gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Barmacreme is a hybrid tea rose sold as Barmacreme hybrid tea rose Barth, with no separate registered exhibition name recorded; supplied here as a verified, premium-quality own-root garden rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by René Barth in France, breeding year 2017; exact parentage and initial distribution data are not available, reflecting a modern, garden-focused hybrid tea introduction. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-height, upright bush reaching about 80–110 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, suitable for beds, borders and low rows. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, cupped hybrid tea blooms with more than 40 petals, borne mainly singly on stems; extra-large flowers around 3.5 inches across, repeating well with a notably abundant second flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pastel cream outer petals with soft peach-pink centres; tones deepen slightly at full bloom then fade to creamy ecru, with ARS code ab and RHS 158D outer, 36D inner, giving a gentle, warm appearance. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Classic, English-rose style scent with a strong but not overwhelming rose fragrance, designed more for human enjoyment than for pollinators, whose access is limited by the very double petal form. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low because of the very double flowers, though occasional small, globular orange-red hips about 10–14 mm in diameter may appear late in the season as a discreet decorative element. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, roughly USDA 6b), with moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring routine but not intensive disease monitoring and care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Medium maintenance rose suited to standard feeding, watering and pruning; recommended spacing from 50–95 cm depending on use, with planting densities around 2.8–3.2 plants per square metre in groups. |
Barmacreme offers elegant, fragrant blooms, dependable repeat flowering and own-root durability for long-term planting; an attractive choice if you would like a refined yet manageable hybrid tea rose.