FRYSTEREO – Silver Shadow hybrid tea rose
With its pastel, silvery-lilac blooms and neat, upright habit, FRYSTEREO brings a quietly refined presence to front gardens and small borders. Medium-sized, high-centred flowers are excellent for cutting, offering a pleasantly sweet fragrance that is gentle rather than overpowering, ideal beside paths and seating. This own-root rose establishes steadily, giving you reassuring longevity and reliable regrowth after pruning or winter weather. In typical British conditions it copes well with moisture and air movement, providing dependable garden structure for many years. Black spot resistance supports easier maintenance in family gardens, and its moderate size suits containers of at least 40–50 litres on patios or by the front door. Deadheading encourages generous repeat flowering, while the occasional orange-red hips add subtle late-season interest. Expect a natural progression as roots strengthen in year one, top growth builds in year two, and full ornamental impact is reached by about the third season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden feature by the entrance |
The upright, medium-height shrub creates a tidy, welcoming presence without overwhelming a small space, while the silvery-pink blooms read clearly from the pavement and front path, suiting doorway focal points where visitors pause; ideal for appearance-conscious homeowners. |
| Cutting row or dedicated cutting patch |
High-centred, exhibition-style blooms on straight stems lend themselves to cutting for the house, with a pastel tone that blends easily into mixed arrangements; the remontant habit offers repeat stems through the season for enthusiastic home florists. |
| Small mixed border with perennials |
The mid-green, glossy foliage and compact spread slot neatly among cottage-style perennials, while pastel flowers soften bolder tones; moderate disease resistance and own-root resilience help maintain a stable, long-lived framework for relaxed border planners and busy gardeners. |
| Container planting on patio or terrace |
Its controlled height and upright habit suit a 40–50 litre or larger container, where roots have room to anchor and support repeated flushes; the gentle scent carries well in sheltered corners, appealing to those cultivating atmospheric seating areas and small-space gardeners. |
| Specimen rose in a lawn island bed |
Planted singly with sufficient spacing, the shrub’s neat outline and recurrent display of silvery-pink blooms give a clear focal point that looks good from multiple viewing angles, rewarding those who prefer one strong feature to complex designs, especially occasional gardeners. |
| Informal row or low hedge |
At the recommended closer spacing, plants knit into an airy, low line that edges paths or separates garden areas; repeat flowering provides colour rhythm along the row, while own-root growth ensures even fill over time, suiting structure-seeking but time-pressed owners. |
| Partially shaded urban garden corner |
Tolerance of partial shade allows planting where sunlight is limited for part of the day, such as between houses or near taller shrubs, still giving pastel blooms and seasonal hips; this suits practical small-city plots and shade-challenged balcony or courtyard gardeners. |
| Coastal or open-site family garden bed |
Steady growth on its own roots helps the plant anchor and adapt in exposed, breezier sites, reducing long-term fuss once established; moderate disease resistance supports a dependable presence for families seeking reliable structure without intensive routines, particularly casual gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-soft – Combine with Iris germanica and soft blues or mauves to echo its silvery-pink tones in a relaxed, cottage-style front border – for lovers of traditional British front gardens.
- Elegant-duo – Plant in a pair of 50-litre containers flanking a doorway, underplanted with white violas or heucheras to highlight the refined blooms – for house-proud entrance-focused homeowners.
- Pastel-ribbon – Create a low hedge along a path, interspersed with low Lonicera nitida ‘Maigrün’ for evergreen structure and soft contrast – for those who like neat, manageable definition.
- Cutting-corner – Dedicate a sunny square or raised bed to a small group of plants, adding simple annuals for filler, to provide easy home-cut flowers – for beginners wanting reliable vases of roses.
- Wild-meets-formal – Set FRYSTEREO amid looser companions such as Eupatorium cannabinum at the back and airy ornamental grasses for a gentle, wildlife-adjacent mood – for gardeners favouring naturalistic yet orderly schemes.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as FRYstereo, marketed as Silver Shadow / FRYSTEREO; hybrid tea group, exhibition-quality, pastel pink blooms with a silvery note, verified cultivar identity for garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in the United Kingdom by Gareth Fryer and introduced by Fryer’s Roses in 2013; developed as a hybrid tea with refined flower form and garden versatility for UK-style conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium-height bush reaching about 80–110 cm tall and 70–100 cm wide, with moderately dense, mid-green glossy foliage and moderate thorns; forms a balanced, compact garden shrub over time. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred hybrid tea blooms, usually borne singly on stems, with around 13–25 petals and medium flower size; remontant habit provides a main flush followed by a generous second flowering period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pastel pink with a delicate silvery-lilac tint; ARS mp, RHS 76C outer and 75D inner; colour lightens as blooms age to powder-pink with a faint silvery-grey veil, especially noticeable on the outer petals. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, sweetish fragrance suited to close-up enjoyment along paths or seating areas; scent is present but not overpowering, making it comfortable in smaller gardens and near frequently used outdoor spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms spherical orange-red hips around 15–21 mm across, adding gentle late-season interest; hip production may vary with deadheading practice, climate, and pollination levels in the garden. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -26 to -23 °C (RHS H7; USDA 5b; Swedish zone 4); disease resistance moderate overall, with good black spot resistance and moderate sensitivity to powdery mildew and rust in some seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to borders, containers, and cutting; plant 50–95 cm apart depending on use, in well-drained soil with regular feeding and watering; deadhead to encourage repeats and prune in late winter or early spring. |
FRYSTEREO offers refined silvery-pink blooms, reliable repeat flowering and a compact, versatile habit on its own roots, making it a long-lived, reassuringly straightforward choice for your garden.