NEW MAIDEN BLUSH – pink historic Alba rose - Booth
This much-loved historic Alba rose brings an early-summer flush of romantic pink blooms on a tall, graceful shrub that suits traditional British front gardens and relaxed cottage borders. Its once-flowering display is richly fragrant, filling the garden and the home with a classic rose perfume, while the bushy, slightly arching habit creates an elegant screen or backdrop in small family plots. As an own-root plant it offers reassuring long-term renewal, steadily building a strong shrub that will endure for decades, with the familiar pattern of year one roots, year two shoots and year three full ornamental value. Well suited to heavier soils when given sensible drainage and good air circulation, it will reward patient gardeners who enjoy a traditional once-a-year spectacle and value the authenticity of a Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit classic.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden statement shrub |
The tall, bushy habit and arching stems form a soft, romantic presence beside paths, bay windows or gateways, giving a period feel that suits traditional brickwork and railings. Best for those who happily wait for one glorious summer display, especially heritage-rose lovers. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
Works well as a vertical anchor in cottage schemes, with perennials and airy companions weaving between its stems, while the blue-green foliage tones gently with purples and whites. Ideal where you want informal summer charm and can manage regular plant health care, appealing to cottage-garden enthusiasts. |
| Flowering hedge or screen |
Planted at hedge spacing, its height and dense structure create a soft green boundary that bursts into a cloud of pink once a year, then settles back into a discreet leafy screen. This suits gardeners seeking a traditional, living boundary and willing to prune and protect it periodically, including period-property owners. |
| Seasonal focal point in small beds |
Used as a single specimen in a modest bed, its once-flowering, strongly scented display becomes a seasonal highlight that structures the whole garden view, then recedes into a calm backdrop of foliage. Best for those who enjoy anticipation and planned seasonal drama, such as design-conscious beginners. |
| Cut-flower corner |
The long, scented stems with large, full rosette blooms can be cut for vases in early summer, giving classic, old-fashioned arrangements with a strong, lingering perfume. Works well if you are happy to sacrifice some garden bloom for indoor use and can maintain healthy foliage, suiting home-floristry fans. |
| Historic or period-style plantings |
With its 1820s origin and traditional Alba character, this cultivar fits seamlessly into heritage schemes and restoration projects, reinforcing the atmosphere of older houses and walled gardens. Ideal for those who value authenticity and accept higher care needs, including garden-history enthusiasts. |
| Partially shaded borders |
Performs reliably in positions with only part-day sun, such as east-facing walls or spots shadowed for part of the afternoon, provided drainage and air flow are sensible in wetter, windier areas. This suits small urban plots or side gardens where sunlight is limited but owners still want romance, especially townhouse-gardeners. |
| Long-term structural planting |
Planted as a young own-root shrub, it gradually develops into a durable, well-anchored framework that responds well to renewal pruning, extending its useful life far beyond many modern roses. Best for those planning a garden for the long term and ready to invest some care, such as long-horizon homeowners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage posy border – combine with Campanula persicifolia, foxgloves and soft geraniums for a loose, pastel ribbon of early-summer colour – ideal for cottage-style romantics.
- Formal heritage hedge – plant a single row at hedge spacing, underplant with low box or dwarf Euonymus for a clipped base line – suited to owners of period façades.
- Pink-and-purple trio – pair with Allium aflatunense and dusky salvias to punch up the once-a-year flower show – good for small gardens needing one strong seasonal highlight.
- Shaded side garden – place in a part-sun strip beside paths, then thread in ferns and hardy geraniums to keep interest after flowering – helpful for narrow, overlooked plots.
- Victorian cutting corner – group 3 shrubs, surround with old-fashioned perennials and use the blooms for richly scented indoor bouquets – perfect for home florists and period-style fans.
Technical cultivar profile
| Aspect |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Historical Alba shrub rose, widely known as ‘Queen of Denmark’, marketed as NEW MAIDEN BLUSH – pink historic Alba rose – Booth; ARS exhibition name ‘Queen of Denmark’. |
| Origin and breeding |
Selected by James Booth & Sons, Flottbek (then Denmark, now Germany) from ‘Great Maiden’s Blush’ seedlings; bred around 1816 and introduced commercially in the 1820s. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit, confirming reliable performance and ornamental value under typical garden conditions when grown with appropriate care. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Tall, bushy shrub 140–200 cm high and 100–160 cm wide, with moderately dense, blue to grey-green foliage on slightly arching, moderately thorny stems that form a graceful outline. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very full, rosette-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, borne mainly in clusters; once-flowering in early summer, with moderate self-cleaning as many spent blooms drop naturally. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium pink flowers, paler at the edges; buds open deep pink then fade through warm pink to pale, almost whitish tones, with colour lightening in strong sun as the bloom matures. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, long-lasting fragrance in full flower, giving a pronounced old-rose scent character that can perfume nearby paths, seating areas and indoor spaces when used as a cut flower. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms small, 10–15 mm, ellipsoidal hips, coloured orange-red; hips are not heavily produced and are mainly of incidental ornamental interest in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Extremely hardy, tolerating approximately -32 to -29 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 5, USDA 4b), but shows moderate to high susceptibility to common fungal diseases, especially rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers sun or light partial shade in fertile, well-drained soil; suitable for beds, hedging and specimen use, but needs regular disease control and attentive irrigation during prolonged drought. |
NEW MAIDEN BLUSH offers a once-a-year flush of romantic, fragrant blooms on a long-lived own-root shrub that will slowly build into a graceful garden classic; consider it if you enjoy historic roses and can commit to regular care.