VALENTINO® – vivid red hybrid tea rose - Barni
This vivid red hybrid tea brings classic elegance to everyday gardens with long-stemmed, high-centred blooms that look as if they belong in a florist’s window. Naturally bushy and upright, it forms a compact, tidy shape that suits small front gardens and narrow borders, while its remontant flowering keeps colour coming through the season. The flowers are richly petalled yet gently fragrant, ideal when you want visual impact without overpowering scent. As an own-root shrub it settles in steadily, building a durable framework and reliable longevity in typical British conditions. Given reasonable drainage it copes well with blustery, wetter sites and holds its blooms cleanly in the rain and wind. Planted in a 40–50 litre container or directly into beds, it offers dependable cutting stems for the house and a smart, formal note to cottage-style mixes. Expect roots to establish strongly in the first year, top growth and flowering to build in the second, with full ornamental impact by the third season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point by the entrance |
The naturally bushy, upright habit stays compact, giving a neat, formal presence beside paths or front doors without overwhelming smaller spaces. Its classic hybrid tea flower form reads clearly from a distance, suiting image-conscious homeowners and beginners. |
| Small groups in mixed cottage borders |
Remontant flowering ensures repeated flushes of vivid red through summer, weaving reliable colour between perennials and shrubs with minimal intervention beyond deadheading. This consistency particularly supports those who want seasonal structure and low-maintenance. |
| Cutting corner for home arrangements |
Long, straight stems and high-centred, florist-style blooms make it excellent for cutting, bringing professional-looking roses indoors from an ordinary garden bed. Regular picking encourages further flowering, appealing to style-focused gardeners and enthusiastic hobbyists. |
| Formal specimen in a 40–50 litre container |
The elegant, upright framework and moderate spread suit a large pot on patios or by the front step, where its showy red flowers can be appreciated up close. Own-root resilience helps long-term performance in containers, supporting space-limited urbanites. |
| Feature rose in compact family beds |
The combination of elegant, exhibition-type blooms and a tidy outline makes it easy to position as a central highlight in small beds. It offers a sophisticated look without complicated pruning routines, ideal for busy family-garden owners. |
| Sunny rose border in typical British conditions |
As an own-root shrub it builds a stable, well-branched framework over time, maintaining shape and flowering even after harsher winters or lighter pruning. This structural longevity reassures those planning long-term planting schemes and cautious planners. |
| Beds exposed to rain and breezier aspects |
Dense, slightly glossy foliage and firm, full blooms help the plant present well even after wet, windy spells, given reasonable soil drainage and routine care, which suits coastal-fringe gardens and weather-aware beginners. |
| Low-scent areas near seating or windows |
The mild, delicately rose-scented character gives a refined fragrance that does not dominate small terraces or window areas, while the strong colour still delivers impact, meeting the needs of visually driven but scent-sensitive garden users. |
Styling ideas
- Portico – Plant a pair in large containers flanking the front door, underplanted with white lobelia for contrast – ideal for homeowners seeking a smart yet manageable entrance.
- Cottage – Combine in a narrow border with lavender and foxgloves, letting the vivid red blooms punctuate softer cottage tones – perfect for lovers of relaxed, traditional plantings.
- Showpiece – Use three plants in a triangle in a small lawn bed, edged with low box, to highlight its exhibition-style flowers – suited to gardeners who enjoy a formal focal point.
- Patio – Grow one plant in a 50 litre pot with trailing thyme at the rim, placing it by seating for close-up flower appreciation – good for balcony and terrace gardeners with limited space.
- Cutting – Dedicate a short row in the veg or utility garden, mixing with annuals such as cosmos to supply vases all summer – appealing to practical gardeners who love homegrown flowers.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; registered as BARval (BAR 4622), marketed as Valentino® hybrid tea rose BARval; BAR 4622, approved exhibition name Valentino in the Hybrid Tea group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Enrico Barni, Rose Barni, Pistoia, Italy; breeding completed around 2010, registered 2010 and introduced 2011, derived from unknown parentage within the hybrid tea lineage. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching 75–105 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, moderately thorny, with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage forming a compact, formal outline in beds or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, high-centred, pointed-budded blooms on mainly solitary stems, with over 40 petals and large flower size, opening slowly in classic cut-rose style suited to exhibition and vases. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid, velvety scarlet-red flowers (RHS 53A outer, 46A inner), only slightly fading to coral-red on outer petals while the centre remains deeper; remontant with abundant second flush in season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, delicately rose-scented character; restrained perfume that is noticeable at close range without overwhelming nearby seating or windows, complementing the strong visual impact of the blooms. |
| Hip characteristics |
May form small numbers of ellipsoidal orange-red hips, around 8–12 mm diameter, adding a modest decorative element in late season where faded flowers are not all removed for deadheading. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b; Swedish zone 3); medium disease resistance, with moderate susceptibility to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, needing routine monitoring. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; medium maintenance with regular watering in dry spells and periodic plant protection, spacing 50–100 cm depending on use and density targets. |
VALENTINO® offers vivid red, exhibition-quality blooms, reliable repeat flowering and a stable own-root framework for years of balanced growth, making it a thoughtful choice for those planning a long-lived, elegant rose feature.