COLORAMA® – red-yellow hybrid tea rose - Meilland
Bring a touch of seaside glamour to your garden with COLORAMA®, a compact hybrid tea rose whose red-and-yellow blooms glow like late-afternoon sun on shingle. Ideal for small coastal plots and verandas, it copes reliably with blustery days and gives you confidence where soil needs careful drainage and planting must be secure against frequent winds and showers. Its upright habit and modest spread make it easy to tuck into family gardens without crowding other plants, while own-root vigour supports a long-lived, low-fuss structure that recovers well from pruning or rough weather. Medium-sized, double, cup-shaped flowers appear in generous waves through the season, offering a classic cutting display for your kitchen table as well as a delicately sweet garden scent. Planted near pale gravel, sea kale, or blue fescues, the warm bi-coloured petals create a striking colour contrast that reads beautifully from a veranda chair with a cup of tea in hand. The pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2‑litre format settles in quickly, focusing first on root establishment, then strong leafy shoots, before rewarding you with full ornamental value around the third summer in your coastal-style retreat.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden border |
The compact, upright habit and moderate spread make this rose easy to fit into narrow front gardens typical of coastal towns, where paths and drives leave limited soil depth and width; its robust own-root growth underpins a long-lived, low-fuss feature for beginners. |
| Salt-tolerant veranda container (40–50 L+) |
In a sturdy 40–50 litre container with free-draining compost, this variety anchors well and flowers dependably, giving season-long colour on breezy verandas while accommodating the practical need for secure, well-drained planting in exposed, rainy settings for homeowners. |
| Family seating area windbreak row |
Planted as a loose row, its upright framework and medium foliage density help soften onshore breezes around terraces or play areas, while repeat flushes of colourful blooms keep the space cheerful without demanding complex pruning work for busy-gardeners. |
| Cut-flower corner near the kitchen door |
The hybrid tea form with long, straight stems and medium, double blooms lends itself to regular cutting for vases; remontant flowering means new buds follow quickly, giving reliable, classic roses for indoor arrangements even when time for garden care is limited for hobby-florists. |
| Accent rose in a shingle or gravel bed |
Set into a shingle bed with good sub-surface drainage, this rose’s strong rootstock-free system adapts well once established, bringing a vivid focal point among sea kale, low grasses, and heucheras like glowing embers against pale stone for coastal-lovers. |
| Mixed border with blue grasses and sedges |
The striking red-and-yellow flowers stand out against glaucous foliage of Festuca or Carex flacca, while the rose’s steady repeat flowering gives structure and colour right through summer, requiring only straightforward seasonal care from style-conscious. |
| Feature rose in a small lawn island bed |
Used as a single specimen in a circular or oval island bed, its tidy footprint, strong vertical habit, and vivid bicolour blooms give clear presence without overwhelming a modest lawn, remaining manageable for light annual pruning by non-specialists. |
| Low-maintenance family rose border |
Good resistance to common rose diseases and a preference for sunny positions make it well suited to simple mixed borders in average British family gardens, where reliable performance with minimal spraying or fuss is valued by time-poor families. |
Styling ideas
- Shingle-Glow – Plant among pale gravel with sea kale and blue grasses to echo a Cornish beach palette – ideal for coastal-style enthusiasts.
- Veranda-Classic – Grow one or two in large tubs beside outdoor seating for easy-to-cut blooms – perfect for tea-on-the-deck traditionalists.
- Sunset-Ribbon – Line a low path with a loose row, pairing with dwarf heucheras for season-long colour – suited to family gardeners wanting simple structure.
- Breeze-Harbour – Use in a mixed, wind-softening hedge with evergreen Euonymus for year-round framework – for homeowners seeking shelter without heavy maintenance.
- Cocktail-Corner – Combine with lavender and ornamental grasses near a patio for scented evenings – attractive to busy urban gardeners entertaining outdoors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose registered as MEIrigalu, marketed as Colorama® Hybrid tea rose MEIrigalu, with American Rose Society exhibition name Colorama, forming part of the Hybrid Tea commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France in 1967 by Marie-Louise Meilland from ‘Suspense’ × ‘Confidence’; introduced 1979 in France by URS - Meilland, representing a classic Meilland hybrid tea lineage. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium bush reaching about 70–100 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with moderately thorny stems and dark green foliage of medium density, forming a tidy, easily managed garden plant. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, cup-shaped hybrid tea blooms with approximately 26–39 petals, borne mainly singly on stems, remontant with a generous second flush that suits both borders and cutting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Bi-coloured red-yellow flowers: vivid red inner petals contrast with pale yellow reverses, shifting through coral and brick red tones as they age while the yellow lightens towards cream and almost off-white. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Clearly noticeable, medium-strength fragrance with a delicately sweet character; mainly ornamental in value as the double, high-centred form limits pollinator access compared with more open-structured roses. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally slight due to full double blooms; where formed, hips are ellipsoidal, around 8–12 mm in diameter, coloured orange-red, and add modest late-season interest in the border. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, offering dependable performance with minimal treatment; winter hardy to around -15 to -12 °C, corresponding to RHS H6 and USDA zone 7b conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with well-drained soil; recommended for borders, specimen use, hedging and larger containers, with spacing from 35–65 cm depending on layout and modest maintenance needs. |
COLORAMA® offers compact structure, abundant repeat flowering and reliable disease resistance in a long-lived own-root form, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed coastal-inspired gardens and busy family plots alike.