CHIC PARISIEN – coral-pink bedding floribunda rose - Delbard-Chabert
Imagine stepping onto a sunny coastal veranda after a breezy walk, enveloped by coral blooms of Chic Parisien that bring effortless elegance to compact beds and large containers. This floribunda’s bushy habit and steady repeat flowering make it a reliable feature in family gardens, thriving even where prevailing winds demand good anchoring and drainage in challenging coastal soils. Semi-double clusters open from refined buds into rounded cups, softening from vivid coral-pink to pastel shades, while dark green foliage adds a calm, structured backdrop. As an own-root rose it settles in gradually, with roots establishing in year one, shoots building shape in year two, and full ornamental value maturing by year three – rewarding you with long-lasting, low-fuss garden pleasure.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
The compact, bushy habit (80–100 cm high) lets you create a tidy, colourful frontage without blocking windows or paths, while reliable remontant flowering keeps interest running through the season for coastal-style homeowners and beginners. |
| Shingle or gravel planting strip |
Coral-pink clusters stand out against pale shingle, and the medium maintenance needs suit informal gravel gardens where you prefer simple, occasional care rather than constant fuss, ideal for relaxed, time-poor gardeners. |
| Large pot on a sheltered veranda (40–50 L+) |
In a generous 40–50 litre container the own-root plant establishes a stable root system and flowers steadily, giving a long-lived focal point that copes well with breezy, salt-tolerant veranda layouts for coastal balcony and terrace owners. |
| Low, colourful hedge along a path |
Recommended spacings of 40–50 cm allow you to form a neat, low hedge that guides the way without feeling formal, with semi-double goblet flowers providing lively colour for family paths and visitors. |
| Mixed border with grasses and perennials |
The natural growth habit blends easily with Festuca, sea kale or sweet alyssum, softening boundaries and giving a relaxed coastal look while repeating waves of bloom thread colour through the border for design-conscious home gardeners. |
| Urban courtyard or patio bed |
Medium disease resistance and tolerance of partial shade make this rose well-suited to enclosed courtyards where airflow is limited, providing dependable colour without complex spraying regimes for busy city-based rose enthusiasts. |
| Family play-garden backdrop |
Bushy structure and moderately dense foliage create a gentle backdrop that frames lawns or play areas, while own-root longevity means the planting matures with the garden over years for long-term-minded family homeowners. |
| Informal park or communal planting |
Suitable for mass planting at 4–4.6 plants/m², it gives consistent seasonal colour with moderate maintenance, anchoring beds that must cope with rain, wind and occasional neglect in shared spaces for local green-space planners. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-border – Combine with sea kale and blue-grey Festuca on a free-draining strip for a salty, breezy feel – ideal for coastal bungalow gardens.
- Veranda-pot – Plant one specimen in a 50 L clay pot with trailing sweet alyssum to soften the rim – perfect for balcony relaxers.
- Pastel-ribbon – Edge a path with a low hedge of this rose and pale lavender for a gentle pastel corridor – suited to family cottage plots.
- Urban-mosaic – Mix with compact evergreens and paving pockets in a courtyard bed to add structure and season-long colour – good for city homeowners.
- Natural-sweep – Mass-plant on a gentle slope with creeping bugle as a ground-level foil for the coral flowers – for low-input, informal gardeners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bed rose, registered as DELtorche, marketed as Chic Parisien; exhibition floribunda suitable for bedding and cutting, verified cultivar identity for vivianaROSE ORIGINAL 2-litre production. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by André Delbard-Chabert, Pépinières & Roseraies Georges Delbard, France; introduced 1956, floribunda group, parentage unrecorded, selected for refined colour and practical bedding performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub, 80–100 cm high and 60–80 cm wide, moderately dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage, medium prickliness; some natural self-cleaning but benefits from periodic deadheading for best display. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double goblet to cup-shaped clusters, 13–25 petals, medium-sized blooms in trusses; flowers repeatedly with a strong second flush, providing good ornamental cover in floribunda bedding schemes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Coral-pink blooms, RHS 36B outer and 36A inner; buds reddish-coral, opening bright then softening to pastel coral and pale pink edges, with colour holding better in cooler, less intense sun conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Soft, rosy fragrance with mild intensity; scent is present but not overpowering, adding a gentle, classic rose character alongside the visual effect rather than dominating nearby seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Moderately abundant spherical hips, 8–12 mm diameter, orange-red; provide late-season interest and a subtle wildlife resource once the main flowering display has reduced towards autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium overall disease resistance; resistant to powdery mildew and black spot, moderate susceptibility to rust; winter hardy to about −21 to −18 °C, equivalent to RHS H7 and USDA zone 6b conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best at 40–80 cm spacing depending on use; suits flowerbeds, edging, solitary and park plantings, medium maintenance with occasional treatments, performs in partial shade and moderate heat with regular watering. |
Chic Parisien offers compact, bushy colour for beds and large containers, repeat flowering over a long season and dependable own-root longevity, making it a thoughtful choice if you value lasting beauty with manageable care.