BEST IMPRESSION® – red-and-white tea-hybrid rose - Evers
Imagine stepping onto your coastal veranda after a breezy walk, a pot of tea in hand, and being greeted by the marbled blooms of Best Impression®, their cherry-red and cream-white stripes echoing beach huts and candy rock. This compact hybrid tea rose in a handy 2-litre container settles quickly into shingle or well-drained beds, offering reliable flowering even where brisk onshore winds and salt-laden air test less robust plants in typical family gardens. Its upright habit and bushy foliage create an easy, natural windbreak behind deckchairs or along a path, while the medium, fruity fragrance drifts invitingly around small spaces. As an own-root rose, it builds strength calmly below ground, bringing a natural rhythm of year one roots, year two top growth and year three full impact for a long-lived, low-fuss display. In sunny Cornish or Devon gardens, a single plant in a 40–50 litre container, or a short row in free-draining clay improved with grit, gives you dependable colour, easy seasonal pruning and an elegant cut-flower source without demanding expert knowledge.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose beside a coastal veranda seating area |
Best Impression® forms a bushy, upright plant that sits neatly beside chairs or a small table, giving a sense of enclosure without overwhelming the space, while its striped flowers add a focal point against light gravel and decking – ideal for relaxed coastal-style homeowners. |
| Large container on a sunny balcony or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre container this medium-height hybrid tea develops a stable root system, supporting regular flowering and good anchorage in wind-exposed spots, so you enjoy showy blooms and fragrance on a small balcony with only straightforward seasonal care for busy city gardeners. |
| Cut-flower source near the back door |
The high-centred, exhibition-type blooms with long, straight stems are perfect for vases, and the repeat-flowering habit ensures you can cut regularly through summer without stripping the plant, making home-grown bouquets very achievable for hobby florists. |
| Accent planting in a mixed coastal flower bed |
Its dense, mid-green foliage and upright form slot easily between perennials such as sea kale and ornamental grasses, adding vertical structure and vivid marbled colour that remains effective through changeable, breezy conditions along exposed, salt-influenced front gardens for design-conscious seaside gardeners. |
| Small flowering hedge along a path or drive |
Planted at about 40 cm intervals, the plants knit into a low, linear feature that guides the eye and gently shelters a path, with recurring red-and-white blooms creating a welcoming approach while requiring only moderate maintenance from confident but time-poor homeowners. |
| Family garden focal point in free-draining clay |
Improved clay soil that allows excess water to drain supports this rose’s bushy habit and stable performance, so it copes better with wet winters yet still flowers well in summer, offering reliable colour and form in average British family plots for practical-minded gardeners. |
| Perfumed corner by a bench or doorway |
The medium, sweet-fruity scent carries nicely in a sheltered nook without being overpowering, enhancing a quiet sitting area where you can enjoy both fragrance and the intricate striping at close range, suiting those who prize sensory details in small spaces. |
| Long-term, easy-care specimen in a front garden |
As an own-root plant it regenerates well from the base, ages gracefully and avoids problems with graft failure, giving a long service life with simple pruning and occasional dead-heading for householders who want lasting value without specialist rose-growing skills. |
Styling ideas
- Striped-Promenade – Underplant with sea kale, Festuca and pale shingle for a beach-promenade look – for coastal-style lovers wanting a crisp yet relaxed entrance.
- Tea-Corner – Place one specimen in a large clay pot beside bistro chairs for a fragrant tea spot – for veranda owners who enjoy leisurely weekend breakfasts.
- Pastel-Ribbon – Create a low hedge along a front path with soft grasses behind to catch the wind – for families wanting structure without a heavy, formal border.
- Candy-Bouquet – Combine with white lavender and silver Artemisia near the back door for easy cutting and arranging – for beginners keen on home-grown indoor flowers.
- Harbour-View – Group three plants with blue containers and nautical decor on a terrace – for busy urban gardeners seeking a simple, coastal-inspired focal point.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, commercial type and group Hybrid tea; registered as TAN04247, marketed as Best Impression® Hybrid tea rose TAN04247, in the vivianaROSE® ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root range. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Hans Jürgen Evers at Rosen Tantau, Germany (breeding year 2004), introduced and registered in 2012, with Rosen Tantau also acting as the initial distributor for this cultivar. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub to about 90–120 cm tall and 45–65 cm wide, moderately thorny, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage creating a compact, vertical accent in beds or large containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, high-centred, pointed buds of classic hybrid tea form, medium-sized solitary blooms (around 1.5–2.75 in), remontant with an abundant second flush, suitable for cutting and garden display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vibrant cherry-red base with cream-white stripes and spots, ARS RB; RHS 53A outer and 155C inner, pattern unique per bloom, fading gradually to pastel marbling as petals expand and age on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength sweet, fruity fragrance that is clearly noticeable at close quarters, adding olfactory interest to seating areas and cut stems without overwhelming more subtle companion plant scents. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set expected to be limited because of very double flowers; where formed, small ovoid orange-red hips (RHS 41A), around 8–13 mm in diameter, offering modest late-season ornamental interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b), benefits from standard rose care and occasional plant protection in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well-drained soil; spacing 50 cm for beds, 40 cm for hedges, 85 cm as a specimen; about 4.0–4.6 plants/m²; medium maintenance with regular dead-heading and basic pruning. |
BEST IMPRESSION® Hybrid tea rose TAN04247 offers marbled flowers, reliable repeat blooming and a compact, long-lived own-root form; consider it if you would like an elegant yet undemanding rose for your garden.