JULIETTA ROSE – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose
Elegant and finely shaped, JULIETTA ROSE brings romantic colour and cut-worthy blooms to compact family gardens. This bushy hybrid tea forms a balanced, medium-height shrub that sits comfortably in front gardens and around-the-house borders, helping you keep spaces orderly without elaborate landscaping. Its pastel peach-pink flowers fade gently to cream, echoing classic cottage style and pairing well with perennials in beds or larger containers from 40–50 litres. Own-root plants establish steadily for a long-lived, reliable display, forming their natural shape where you plant them, so care remains manageable over time. You can prune it flexibly for borders, low hedging or specimen use, and enjoy both garden impact and cut stems indoors, even in sites that may experience brisk winds and frequent showers. Given adequate feeding and moisture, it settles in well, progressing from root building to strong shoots and then full ornamental effect over its first three years, ideal for beginners seeking dependable charm.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden feature shrub |
The bushy, medium-height habit creates an upright, tidy presence that suits the scale of typical British front gardens while still allowing windows and paths to remain open and light; a good choice for house-proud homeowners. |
| Small, formal rose bed |
Regular spacing at 65 cm gives a structured, repeat-flowering bed where the uniformly shaped, very full blooms provide an elegant, almost formal look without complex design work, ideal for time-conscious beginners. |
| Cottage-style border groups |
Soft peach-pink flowers blend naturally with blues and creams, working well with cottage companions such as clematis or honeysuckle to create relaxed, layered borders that still appear intentional for style-focused gardeners. |
| Specimen rose near seating |
Planted at around 100 cm spacing, one shrub can be allowed to develop as a focal specimen with dense, slightly glossy foliage and refined blooms that reward occasional grooming, suiting contemplative rose-lovers. |
| Cutting corner in the garden |
The large, very full, cup-shaped flowers are carried in clusters on strong stems, making it easy to take regular bunches indoors without stripping the plant, appealing to fragrance-aware but practical flower-arrangers. |
| Low rose hedge along paths |
At a recommended 55 cm for hedging, repeated plants form a low, bushy line with consistent height and colour, guiding paths and driveways neatly while needing only periodic trimming, ideal for orderly-minded families. |
| Large patio container (40–50 L+) |
In a generous pot with good drainage, this own-root shrub establishes a stable framework and can be shifted seasonally to suit patios that may face brisk coastal winds and frequent rain, helpful for flexible urban balcony-owners. |
| Mixed rose-and-perennial bed |
Medium disease resistance, steady remontant flowering and a balanced mature size make it a reliable backbone rose, filling gaps between perennials as it builds from early root growth to full display, reassuring long-term focused starters. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE DUO – combine with blue Caucasian forget-me-not to echo soft apricot and sky tones in a relaxed, billowing border – ideal for romantic-style front-garden owners
- PATHWAY EDGE – plant a short line along a front path at hedge spacing for a gentle, welcoming ribbon of colour – suited to families who like clear, tidy access
- PATIO FOCAL – grow one shrub in a 50-litre terracotta container with low herbs at the base for scent and structure – perfect for busy urban gardeners with limited beds
- MIXED CLIMBER PARTNER – back with a slender clematis such as ‘Rooguchi’ so bell-shaped flowers weave through the pastel roses – appealing to cottage-garden enthusiasts
- SOFT BORDER FRAME – group three plants in a shallow arc around a seating area, filling gaps with airy grasses for movement – attractive for design-conscious beginners seeking coherence
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
JULIETTA ROSE – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose; Hybrid Tea group, commercial hybrid tea rose; collection hybrid tea rose; discovered and marketed by pharmaROSA®, authenticity verified. |
| Origin and breeding |
Parentage and breeder background are not recorded; discovered by pharmaROSA® and distributed internationally through partners, with introductions via specialist cut-flower and garden rose growers. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 90–130 cm high and 75–105 cm wide; moderately thorny canes with dense, medium-green, slightly glossy foliage that clothes the framework well when grown in sunny garden positions. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, cup-shaped blooms with more than 40 petals; cluster-flowering habit, producing repeated flushes through the season with abundant second flowering, ideal for cutting and display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft peach-pink base with rosy centre; ARS pb, RHS 65C outer and 65A inner; opens peach with pink centre, then pales to pastel with creamy petal edges as blooms age gracefully. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, sweet, fruity scent that is present but not overpowering; suited to close-up enjoyment near seating or paths, without dominating nearby plants or outdoor living spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rosehip set is usually low because of very double flowers; when formed, hips are small, spherical, 8–12 mm across, in an orange-red shade that can add light autumn interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 with hardiness around –26 to –23 °C, USDA zone 5b; medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, needing standard preventative care in humid or high-pressure seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; planting distances 55–100 cm depending on hedge, mass or specimen use; medium maintenance, with occasional deadheading and routine pest and disease checks. |
JULIETTA ROSE offers elegant pastel blooms, steady repeat flowering and a balanced, bushy habit on a durable own-root plant that matures gracefully over years, making it a thoughtful choice when planning your next garden addition.